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Social Science Popular Culture

Productive Postmodernism

Consuming Histories and Cultural Studies

edited by John N. Duvall

afterword by Linda Hutcheon

Publisher
State University of New York Press
Initial publish date
Dec 2001
Category
Popular Culture, Aesthetics, Semiotics & Theory
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780791451946
    Publish Date
    Dec 2001
    List Price
    $45.95
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780791451939
    Publish Date
    Dec 2001
    List Price
    $128.95

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Description

Investigates a broad range of contemporary fiction, film, and architecture to address the role of history in postmodern cultural productions.

Productive Postmodernism addresses the differing accounts of postmodernism found in the work of Fredric Jameson and Linda Hutcheon, a debate that centers around the two theorists' senses of pastiche and parody. For Jameson, postmodern texts are ahistorical, playing with pastiched images and aesthetic forms, and are therefore unable to provide a critical purchase on culture and capital. For Hutcheon, postmodern fiction and architecture remain political, opening spaces for social critique through a parody that deconstructs official history. Thinking in the space between these two sharply different positions, the essays in this collection investigate a broad range of contemporary fiction, film, and architecture-from such narratives as Don DeLillo's Libra, Toni Morrison's Beloved, and Ridley Scott's Blade Runner, to the vastly different spaces of Las Vegas casinos and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum-in order to ask what the cultural work of a postmodern aesthetic might be.

About the authors

John N. Duvall's profile page

Linda Hutcheon holds the rank of University Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto. A specialist in postmodernist culture and in critical theory, on which she has published nine books, she has also worked collaboratively in large projects involving hundreds of scholars.

Linda Hutcheon's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Although there are many books on postmodernism, I don't know of any that theorize Jameson and Hutcheon this way or that bring history-fiction-architecture together so provocatively. I like the way these essays, all of them, put theory into practice." — Dawne McCance, author of Posts: Re Addressing the Ethical

 

"The text articulates well the shift from postmodernism as a de(con)structive fragmenting theory/act (as it is so often in both popular and academic contexts) to a productive fragmenting theory/act. The book contributes to the field of postmodern theory as well as to the literary, architectural, historical, and aesthetic fields tapped into through the individual essays." — Beth Martin Birky, Goshen College

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