Postmodernism: The Movement in Life

1257 Words3 Pages

Although the postmodern movement was not started in America, its many effects have influenced the culture of this nation. Postmodernism took America from a place where it held strong values of right and wrong, to a place where any idea has been given validity and merit. By presenting new world views, postmodernism has affected American literature, for both the writer and the reader, and American culture on a vast scale. Explaining postmodernism is very challenging because it does not have a real meaning other than “after modernism” (Merriam-Webster). Postmodernism has influenced every aspect of American culture from literature and the media to family and social relationships as well as the way a person views himself and the world around him. The postmodern movement does not have specific dates of origin, though 1945-1950 seems to be the most agreed on start date (wwnorton.com). Nor was it an organized movement; because of this fact no one is able to say when it ended or when it will end. Jean-François Lyotard famously described postmodernism as “incredulity toward metanarratives” (xiv). This quote requires a bit of explanation in order to make it comprehensible. Incredulity means the quality or state of being incredulous or disbelief and metanarrative can be defined as “… totalizing, all-encompassing (meta) stories (narratives) about the history, purpose, and goals of mankind that provide the foundation for the interpretation of information, the organization of knowledge, and the establishment of cultural practices” (Taylor 1). Putting both things together gives a short and brief summary of what postmodernism means. The publication of Catch-22, Lost in the Funhouse, Slaughterhouse Five and Gravity’s Rainbow in the 60s and 7...

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