Postmodernism Essays

  • Postmodernism

    2623 Words  | 6 Pages

    Postmodernism With the end of colonialism and the emergence of a seemingly new world order, there raised a demand that research be useful and relevant, indicating that knowledge for its own sake was insufficient. As a result of this, what emerged was a new focus on 'development' and 'modernization' in the form of postmodernism. In these changing times, anthropology has come into contact with a variety of evolving concepts, including hybridity, montage, fluidity, and deconstruction

  • Postmodernism

    504 Words  | 2 Pages

    Postmodernism The 20th Century, in many ways, can be remembered as a time of scientific and technological revolution. The innovations and rapid growth in many areas of technology have cast doubt upon words such as ignorance and impossibility. This revolution also instigated new and/or radical ideas in the world of academia. The growth of post-modernism and its adherers in historical circles have caused quite a stir in dealing with the validity of many historical documents. Critical analysis

  • Postmodernism

    3924 Words  | 8 Pages

    Postmodernism Traditional thinking has understood the world in its totality as including both chaos and harmony. Lovelock's hypothesis gives us a new resolution to this problem by expanding or even relocating creativity from the human intellect to the world. Postmodernism is the return to the mythological-aesthetic reflexion of the world concerning the idea of order and harmony. Facing the publicly known and proclamated appeals for further prosperity, scepticism is being survived so deeply

  • Assessment of Postmodernism

    1618 Words  | 4 Pages

    defined in terms of an aspiration to reveal the essential truth of the world’ (Boyne and Rattansi, 1990). ‘[In postmodernism] philosophical pillars are brought down, the most notable of which are the ‘unities’ of meaning, theory and the self’ (Hassard and Parker, 1993). In my opinion the above quotes neatly summarise the motivational ideas behind modernism and postmodernism as thought processes. However different the inspiration, methodology, and conclusions of classical sociological ideas

  • Postmodernism Essay

    1671 Words  | 4 Pages

    familiar with the meaning of postmodernism. Generally speaking, in its shortest explanation, postmodernism can be understood as a reaction against modernism. “ To speak of postmodernism means that we have some idea of that which has been superseded- modernism.” (Edwards in Wells: 2003: 188). Following this path it is essential then to understand the meaning of the era that was before- modernism, which shaped the modern times and in turn led to the birth of postmodernism. Both of these phenomena were

  • Postmodernism Analysis

    962 Words  | 2 Pages

    3.1. Brief Contextualisation of the characteristics of Modernism and Late-Modernism. Before postmodernism can be understood clearly a brief understanding of modernism needs to be contextualised and explained. The modernist movement started to form in the late 19th and early 20th century, some of the forming factors of modernism came from the rapid growth of the modern industrial societies and the horror that arose form World War I. Many modernists rejected enlightened thinking and gave up all

  • Postmodernism in the Theatre

    859 Words  | 2 Pages

    Postmodernism is a reaction to the classical types of art and theatre that had existed up until modern history, which relied on literature as the main focus of a work. The postmodernist movement began after the modernist movement, which occurred during the 19th and 20th centuries. Postmodernism is not necessary meant to be the opposite of art forms from the past, but rather, it is meant to open a person up to new experiences. Some postmodernist artists are concerned with creating works that will

  • Birdman Postmodernism

    708 Words  | 2 Pages

    Birdman is full postmodernism, every aspect of the movie contributes to this from the filming technique to the message (AND THAT ENDING!!!). A major aspect of Birdman is transcending reality, i think that his need to become a famous hero manifested into him becoming a “hero”, I’m unsure whether the flying and telekinesis etc. is “real” or not (infact i'm pretty sure its not because there is a scene with a taxi that undermines his ability to fly) but this doesn't really matter, what does is that he

  • Postmodernism Essay

    1219 Words  | 3 Pages

    Postmodernism The emergence of digital technologies coincides with the rise of postmodernist films, videos, and audio art. Postmodernism literally means “after” or “beyond” modernism. Whereas modernist art emphasizes the individual artist’s self-expression and the purity of artistic form, postmodernist art is anything but pure. Postmodern approaches to production could feature the following: Intertextuality: Postmodernism often considered intertextual, which means it features a collage or grab

  • Postmodernism Essay

    1813 Words  | 4 Pages

    Postmodernism is described as the phase of twentieth century Western culture that has been often defined as the visual culture produced in the period after modernism, though there has been much recent debate since the early 1980’s as to what the definition of Postmodernism could be. Postmodern art has always been difficult to define for various reasons which include what styles of art should be included in the movement, what is the exact artistic style of Postmodern art and the insufficiency to specify

  • Postmodernism And Modernism

    1552 Words  | 4 Pages

    in order to make the story stick that postmodern theory is distinguished by its antifoundationalism, commentators assimilate the modernist period to the enlightenment. Postmodernism is a reaction to modernism which, in turn, is equivalent to Enlightenment foundationalism.” If we hold the enlightenment as the foil to postmodernism, one must note that the rebellion against the Enlightenment began long before the emergence of the postmodern movement. Carroll notes: “Postmodern dance gets going around

  • Modernistism And Postmodernism

    529 Words  | 2 Pages

    Postmodernism “We cannot conceive of ‘night’ without knowing what day is. A person cannot know what a ‘tree’ is without knowing what a tree isn’t!”(Unknown author). Postmodernism is a theory that critically questions whether anything can be truly defined and known. A post modernist would argue that nothing beyond imagination can be essentially knowable. This is because nothing in this world can be made of without relating it to other objects or perhaps ideas. For example; “We cannot, as a result

  • The Philosophy of Postmodernism

    1050 Words  | 3 Pages

    The philosophy of postmodernism supported the feeling of variety and uniqueness with all architecture. Beginning in the 1960's and lasting through today, the postmodern movement took root as a response to modernist design. This movement began in America and then spread internationally across the globe. Postmodernism, concerns the symbolism, ornament, technology and the relation of existing and past cultures. Postmodern designers tend to reject the functional, minimal use of materials and lack of

  • Postmodernism vs. Marxism

    1464 Words  | 3 Pages

    Postmodernism vs. Marxism Postmodernism is perhaps the most difficult thing to define at this point in time. That is in large part due to the fact that we are currently still in the movement, political view, or economy (to classify postmodernism as only one of the above is to have already defeated your definition). One of the few things that have been empirically proven is that it indeed focuses on culture. Jameson once argued that postmodernism was a more of a cultural dominant than anything

  • Postmodernism and the commodification of art

    1286 Words  | 3 Pages

    final authority and a totalizing narrative that totality no longer exists. These three ideas could lead one to believe that postmodernism is hypocrisy. In a way, it has to be hypocritical. If a definition of postmodernism is the erosion of the six pillars of modernity but those six pillars still exist regardless of postmodernism that how does postmodernism exist? Postmodernism seems to have two completely separate trains of thought. The first train of thought is the idea of paralogy and disrupting

  • Postmodernism: An Art Style

    1312 Words  | 3 Pages

    Postmodernism is a style of art that first became popular in the late 20th century. When seeing the word postmodernism, it might have to do with any one medium of art-- literature, philosophy, history, economics, architecture, fiction, and literary criticism. Lyotard, a founder of postmodernism in philosophy, is quoted as saying, “Simplifying to the extreme, I define the postmodern as incredulity toward metanarratives.” By saying this, Lyotard simply meant that, as a postmodernist, he was against

  • Postmodernism Cinema Essay

    1573 Words  | 4 Pages

    characterize cinema in the 21st century. What the term suggests regarding contemporary film or the present-day society is far from agreed (Tudor, 2002). This paper examines the term ‘postmodernism’ as depicted in Andrew Tudor’s work “From Paranoia to Postmodernism: The Horror Movie in the Late Modern Society.” Discussion Postmodernism Cinema

  • Midnight's Children Postmodernism

    990 Words  | 2 Pages

    Rushdie, Postmodernism & Postcolonialism Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children, published in 1980, was perhaps the seminal text in conceiving opinions as to interplay of post-modern and post-colonial theory. The title of the novel refers to the birth of Saleem Sinai, the novel’s principal narrator, who is born at midnight August 15th 1947, the precise date of Indian independence. From this remarkable coincidence we are immediately drawn to the conclusion that the novel’s concerns are of the new India

  • Postmodernism in Latin America

    713 Words  | 2 Pages

    Postmodernism in Latin America Postmodernism is the 19th and 20th century reaction against the previously dominant western foundationalism, or modernism. Foundationalism is rooted in classic Cartesian philosophy: ontologically, an objective reality exists independent of our perception of this reality and we can gain access to it if our theories are logically based on some indubitable foundation. For Descartes, this indubitable, uncontroversial point of reference aligns with "I think, therefore

  • Postmodernism in Pulp Fiction

    1676 Words  | 4 Pages

    Tarantino made Pulp Fiction, the academic and critic Frederic Jameson identified some of the key features of postmodernism, and debated whether these were a true departure from modernism, or just a continuation of the same rebellious themes. His paper on postmodernism tends towards the latter view, but at the same time prophetically pinpointed the essential departures that postmodernism has made from what has gone before. Tarantino’s film does not continue the debate in an academic way, but instead