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01 November 05 - 15:27Postmodernism in a Nutshell

Below this entry is a short essay about postmodernism. For those that might find the short essay too long, here is how I would describe postmodernism in a nutshell:

Premodernism:  Reality is imposed from above, i.e. by the church

Modernism:  The attempt to realize a universal shared reality based on observable phenomena

Postmodernism: Reality is individually constructed and structured

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01 November 05 - 13:58What the Heck is PoMo Anyway?

PoMo is a colloquial term for Postmodernism. The mass media often makes reference to postmodernism, but generally only as an adjective to describe art or architecture. But what exactly does postmodern mean? One can readily infer that postmodernism means "after modernism" but that is only helpful once one knows what the term modernism refers to...and still leaves unanswered the question as to what it is that came after modernism. One way to discuss postmodernism is to look at what is being referred to when the terms "modern" or "postmodern" are used to discuss art, architecture, or society. The reference is to the way in which individuals, groups, and societies understand reality.

Before the "Modern" era:

Prior to the modern era most people understood what was real in terms of an imposed worldview. Before the "Age of Enlightenment" the average person was at the mercy of the church, the state, or a feudal lord. Without literacy or access to formal education people depended on their leaders to tell them how the world functioned. The shared reality of social units was imposed "from above" by a small elite.

Modernism:
The "modern" view of reality came about as access to literature and learning became broader and as leading intellectuals began a search for a commonly understood shared view of reality. The dawn of modernism began with the Enlightenment and the Age of Reason. In the twentieth century modernism reached its apex, especially in the arts, as artists began experimenting with the perception of reality, and with ways of expressing individual perceptions of the generally accepted shared reality.

Postmodernism:
Postmodernism has its roots in the middle of the twentieth century. At this time psychologists were beginning to see that each individual actually created, or constructed his or her own unique reality. Postmodernism questioned the existence of any universal world-view, and instead suggested a constructivist approach from which multiple realities were constructed by individuals and groups of individuals. For psychologists this meant that instead of trying to gain conformity to a shared social reality, individuals should be encouraged to construct functional personal realities. The most well-known psychological manifestation of postmodernism is the "client-centered" approach to counselling as espoused by Carl Rogers. In the visual arts postmodernism allowed artists to become "unlocked in time" and to borrow from the past while simultaneously building on the past.

Postmodernism and Fluxus:
After the First World War many artists and writers became disillusioned with the results of modernism after having witnessed or participated in the senseless slaughter of the war. Dada sowed the first seeds of artistic post-modernism, but without an alternative post-modern worldview, dada was restricted to nihilistic artistic protest and mayhem. With the dawn of the postmodern worldview in the 1950s a new "anti-art" movement was born that included the humour and protest elements of dada but replaced the nihilism of dada with either optimism or with a non-committal trivialization of the modern worldview. The artist, George Maciunas coined the term "Fluxus" to describe this first postmodern manifestation of intermedia in the arts.

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