Bonus Critical Claims
Be skeptical:
What is a post modernism definition? Postmodernism is an attempt to rethink the cultural landscape with theories taken from linguistics, psychiatry, continental philosophy, and left-wing politics. Postmodernist poetry tends to be a cotery art – fragmentary, solipsist and provisional, opposed to the 'great themes of art' and indeed to saying anything definite. There probably is no post modernism definition per se: anything goes. Contemporary poetry may be visually attentive, apocalytic, tender, romantic, confessional, or whatever it pleases.
To many readers, Postmodernist poetry is not poetry at all, and they are not to be persuaded by any post modernism definition. Yet its styles are simple and indeed enjoy a distinguished ancestry. Cultivation of inward states of mind is a Symbolist legacy. Imagery drawn from a contemporary, sometimes tawdry urban, setting derives from Modernism. Ezra Pound's Cantos replaced stanzas with rhythmic phrasing. William Carlos William's poems ('chopped up prose') employed everyday language, breaking lines arbitrarily for unusual effects. The Black Mountain School phrased their lines on a natural tendency to draw breath. Concrete poetry and experimental layouts go back to Apollinaire's Calligrammes. And so on: Postmodernism is perhaps only a step towards a more consumerist and proletarian view of the world.
As is shown more clearly in the visual arts, Postmodernism is iconoclastic, groundless, formless and populist. What does that mean? An introduction to John Ashbery and J.H. Prynne is given in PoetryMagic's Advanced section, but you'll need to consult the PoetryMagic Professional section for argued theory with references. Of course, you may prefer to simply read the poetry, which you'll find in the periodicals and newspapers listed under the Book News sidebox. Though classified simply as contemporary, you'll find many of the poems in Electronic Poetry Review, Academy of American Poets, Light and Dust Anthology or the magazines listed by PoetryKit and The PoetryMachine exhibit Postmodernist techniques, even if their content can be fairly traditional. |
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Post modernism definitions and contemporary literary theory don't always make for easy or convincing reading, but good places to start are: B. Bergonzi's Exploding English: Criticism, Theory, Culture (1990), C. Belsey's Critical Practice (1980), W.V. Harris's Literary Meaning: Reclaiming the Study of Literature, J. Sturrock's Structuralism and Since: From Lévi-Strauss to Derrida (1984), R. Seldon's The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism Vol 8 (1995), and John Hopkins Guide to Literary Theory and Criticism. For the poetry try: A History of Modern Poetry Vol 2 (1987) by D. Perkins and Contemporary Poetry and Postmodernism: Dialogue and Estrangement (1996) by I. Gregson. Recent anthologies are Up Late: American Poetry Since 1970 by A. Codrescu (1990) and Postmodern American Poetry by P. Hoover (1994)
by Martin Irvine
Modernism/Modernity | Postmodern/Postmodernity |
Master Narratives and Metanarratives of history, culture and national identity; myths of cultural and ethnic orgin. | Suspicion and rejection of Master Narratives; local narratives, ironic deconstruction of master narratives: counter-myths of origin. |
Faith in "Grand Theory" (totalizing explantions in history, science and culture) to represent all knowledge and explain everything. | Rejection of totalizing theories; pursuit of localizing and contingent theories. |
Faith in, and myths of, social and cultural unity, hierarchies of social-class and ethnic/national values, seemingly clear bases for unity. | Social and cultural pluralism, disunity, unclear bases for social/national/ethnic unity. |
Master narrative of progress through science and technology. | Skepticism of progress, anti-technology reactions, neo-Luddism; new age religions. |
Sense of unified, centered self; | Sense of fragmentation and decentered self; |
Idea of "the family" as central unit of social order: model of the middle-class, nuclear family. | Alternative family units, alternatives to middle-class marriage model, multiple identities for couplings and childraising. |
Hierarchy, order, centralized control. | Subverted order, loss of centralized control, fragmentation. |
Faith and personal investment in big politics (Nation-State, party). | Trust and investment in micropolitics, identity politics, local politics, institutional power struggles. |
Root/Depth tropes. | Rhizome/surface tropes. |
Faith in the "real" beyond media and representations; authenticity of "originals" | Hyper-reality, image saturation, simulacra seem more powerful than the "real"; images and texts with no prior "original". |
Dichotomy of high and low culture (official vs. popular culture); | Disruption of the dominance of high culture by popular culture; |
Mass culture, mass consumption, mass marketing. | Demassified culture; niche products and marketing, smaller group identities. |
Art as unique object and finished work authenticated by artist and validated by agreed upon standards. | Art as process, performance, production, intertextuality. |
Knowledge mastery, attempts to embrace a totality. | Navigation, information management, just-in-time knowledge. |
Broadcast media, centralized one- | Interactive, client-server, distributed, many- |
Centering/centeredness, | Dispersal, dissemination, |
Determinancy | Indeterminancy, contingency. |
Seriousness of intention and purpose, middle-class earnestness. | Play, irony, challenge to official seriousness, subversion of earnestness. |
Sense of clear generic boundaries and wholeness (art, music, and literature). | Hybridity, promiscuous genres, recombinant culture, intertextuality, pastiche. |
Design and architecture of New York and Boston. | Design and architecture of LA and Las Vegas |
Clear dichotomy between organic and inorganic, human and machine | cyborgian mixing of organic and inorganic, human and machine and electronic |
Phallic ordering of sexual difference, unified sexualities, exclusion/bracketing of pornography | androgyny, queer sexual identities, polymorphous sexuality, mass marketing of pornography |
the book as sufficient bearer of the word; | hypermedia as transcendence of physical limits of print media; |
-- http://www.georgetown.edu/irvinemj/technoculture/pomo.html