literary criticism class #11. postmodernism 1. after modernism? 2. contra modernism?

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Literary Criticism Class #11

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Page 1: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Literary Criticism

Class #11

Page 2: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Postmodernism1. After modernism?

2. Contra modernism?

Page 3: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Differences (1)

The modernist laments fragmentation while the postmodernist celebrates it.

(Barry 84)

Page 4: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Differences (2)

Postmodernism rejects the distinction between ‘high’ and ‘popular’ art which was important in modernism, and believes in excess, in gaudiness, and in ‘bad taste’ mixture of qualities. (Barry 84)

Page 5: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Habermas, Jürgen. “Modernity versus Postmodernity.” 1981. A Postmodern Reader. Eds. Joseph Natoli and Linda Hutcheon. Albany, NY: SUNY, 1993. 91-104.

Page 6: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

“Modernity revolts against the normalizing functions of tradition; modernity lives on the experience of rebelling against all that is normative” (Habermas 94).

Page 7: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

“The project of modernity formulated in the 18th century by the philosophers of the Enlightenment consisted in their efforts to develop objective science, universal morality and law, and autonomous art, according to their inner logic.” (Habermas 98)

Page 8: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

“At the same time, this project intended to release the cognitive potentials of each of these domains to set them free from their esoteric forms. The Enlightenment philosophers wanted to utilize this accumulation of specialized culture for the enrichment of everyday life, that is to say, for the rational organization of everyday social life” (Habermas 98).

Page 9: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

“Enlightenment thinkers . . . had the extravagant expectation that the arts and the sciences would promote not only the control of natural forces, but would also further understanding of the world and of the self, would promote moral progress, the justice of institutions, and even the happiness of human beings” (Habermas 98).

Page 10: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

“In sum, the project of modernity has not yet been fulfilled . . .” (Habermas 102).

Page 11: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Lyotard, Jean-François. “Excerpts from The Postmodern Condition.” 1979. A Postmodern Reader. Eds. Joseph Natoli and Linda Hutcheon. Albany, NY: SUNY, 1993. 71-90.

Page 12: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

There is a “crisis of narratives” (71).

“I will use the term modern to designate any science that legitimates itself with reference to a metadiscourse . . . making an explicit appeal to some grand narrative . . .” (Lyotard 72).

“I define postmodern as an incredulity toward metanarratives” (Lyotard 72).

Page 13: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

“Thus the society of the future falls less within the province of a Newtonian anthropology (such as structuralism or systems theory) than a pragmatics of language particles. There are many different language games—a heterogeneity of elements. They only give rise to institutions in patches—local determinism.” (Lyotard 72)

Page 14: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Venturi, Robert. “The Duck and the Decorated Shed.” Postmodernism: A Reader. Ed. Thomas Docherty. NY: Columbia UP, 1993.

Page 15: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?
Page 16: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Crawford Manor vs. Guild House

Page 17: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

http://libraries.mit.edu/rvc/kidder/kjpegs/C0752-063~.jpg

Paul Rudolph’s Crawford Manor

Page 18: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

http://libraries.mit.edu/rvc/kidder/kjpegs/C0752-064~.jpg

Paul Rudolph’s Crawford Manor

Page 19: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Crawford ManorHigh-rise apartment for the elderly

“heroic and original” (299)

“ordinary and conventional but do not look it” (295)

Page 20: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

http://faculty.cva.edu/contemporaryart/imagepg2.html

Page 21: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

http://www.arch.mcgill.ca/prof/sijpkes/arch374/winter2001/mwildm/

Page 22: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

http://www.arch.mcgill.ca/prof/sijpkes/arch374/winter2001/mwildm/guildhs.html

Page 23: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Guild HouseHigh-rise apartment for the elderly

“ugly and ordinary” (299)

“ordinary and conventional and look it” (295)

Page 24: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Guild House

Denotation Connotation

Heraldic Physiognomic

The sign Guild house Graphics: institutional dignity

Size: commercialism

Position: entering

White-glazed brick

Decoration Floor levels + palace Palacelike scale and monumentality

Double-hung windows

Window Domestic, ordinary

Page 25: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

heraldry

Page 26: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The duck vs.

the decorated shed

Page 27: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The Duck

Where the architectural systems of space, structure, and program are submerged and distorted by an overall symbolic form.

http://www.arch.mcgill.ca/prof/sijpkes/arch374/winter2001/mwildm/

Page 28: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The Duck

When a building is subtly formed and interpreted by its overall composure, it is then that we have a duck.

http://www.arch.mcgill.ca/prof/sijpkes/arch374/winter2001/mwildm/

Page 29: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The Duck

'Ducks' . . . connote meaning through expressive features in the visible fabric of the building itself, 'ducks' do not have added ornamentation. http://www.hku.hk/english/courses2000/7006/week6.htm

Page 30: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Venturi, a duck (Learning from Las Vegas, 1972) http://faculty.cva.edu/contemporaryart/imagepg2.html

Page 31: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Pyramids at Giza

http://www.msjc.edu/art/djohnson/art101/101lecture4.html

Page 32: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The Decorated ShedWhere systems of space and structure are directly at the service of program, and ornament is applied independently of them. This we call the decorated shed. http://www.arch.mcgill.ca/prof/sijpkes/arch374/winter2001/mwildm/

Page 33: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The Decorated ShedWhen the sign is literal and spelled out either by letters or by bold ornaments, we end up with a decorated shed. http://www.arch.mcgill.ca/prof/sijpkes/arch374/winter2001/mwildm/

Page 34: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

The Decorated ShedDominated by signs which denote meaning (usually function and brand name) and which connote commercialism in their size, the 'decorated shed' is a mismatch of design and function. It is a building which has applied to it the ornaments and signs that indicate its use. http://www.hku.hk/english/courses2000/7006/week6.htm

Page 35: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Venturi, a decorated shed (Learning from Las Vegas) http://faculty.cva.edu/contemporaryart/imagepg2.html

Page 36: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/reviews/goldsworthy/Images/goldsworthy1-25-4.jpg

Page 37: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

"A roadway could become a city. A building could become a sign. In no place at all, someplace could be created. That is Las Vegas' genius." http://www.reviewjournal.com/lvrj_home/1997/Jul-06-Sun-1997/photos/architecture-4.jpg

Page 38: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Niels Ole Lund : Venturi Visits Las Vegas, 1976 http://www.toender-gym.dk/Kjelds/Stilbi/Venturi.jpg

Page 39: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

SummaryVenturi sought to introduce notions of irony, playfulness, multivalenced lexicons and a celebration of the ordinary into architecture, resisting the austere, monumental and heroic quality of modern architecture; and in so doing, he sought to make architecture bend to the demands of place, more responsive to the immediate historical and cultural environment of its location of buildings. (Woods 97)

Page 40: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Key Features of Postmodernist Architecture

1. A celebration of spectacle2. Radical eclecticism3. Random historicism4. Irrational space5. Parodic metaphor

(Woods 112-113)

Page 41: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

Fredric JamesonA critic of postmodern architecture

Jameson argues that postmodern architecture functions aesthetically to undermine democratic urban space, since it merely imitates the cultural logic of late capitalism, which is a consumer-led triumphalism. (Woods 95)

Page 42: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

White Noise#1: p. 3, first paragraph;

p.20, “It seemed to me . . . . in the evening.”;

p. 36, “I realized . . . . apprehension.”

#2: pp. 12-13, “Several days later. . . .”

#3: pp. 16-17, “On one such night . . . .”

#4: pp. 22-25, till “in the penitentiary”

#5: pp. 25-26: “It was warm . . .” to the end.

#6: pp. 37-39: “He helped . . . . dry cleaning.’”

Page 43: Literary Criticism Class #11. Postmodernism 1. After modernism? 2. Contra modernism?

References

Woods, Tim. Beginning Postmodernism. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1999.