Histories of postmodernism
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Histories of postmodernism
(Routledge studies in cultural history, 5)
Routledge, 2007
- : hardback
Available at 6 libraries
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Histories of Postmodernism reexamines the history of the constellation of ideas and thinkers associated with postmodernism. The increasingly dominant historical narrative depicts a relatively smooth development of ideas from Friedrich Nietzsche and Martin Heidegger, through a range of French theorists, most notably Jacques Derrida and Michel Foucault, to contemporary American thinkers such as Richard Rorty, Edward Said, and Judith Butler. Histories of Postmodernism challenges this narrative by highlighting the local contexts of relevant theorists and thus the crucial distinctions that divide successive articulations of the themes and concepts associated with postmodernism. As postmodern ideas traveled from nineteenth-century Germany to mid-twentieth-century France and on to the contemporary United States, so the relevant theorists transformed that heritage within the context of particular intellectual traditions and specific political and aesthetic issues.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Histories of Postmodernism 2. Honesty as the Best Policy: Nietzsche on Redlichkeit and the Contrast between Stoic and Epicurean Strategies of the Self 3. Escape from the Subject: Heidegger's Das Man and Being-in-the-World 4. A Rock and a Hard Place: Althusser, Structuralism, Communism and the Death of the Anticapitalist Left 5. Hammer without a Master: French Phenomenology and the Origins of Deconstruction (Or, How Derrida Read Heidegger) 6. 'A Kind of Radicality': The Avant-garde Legacy in Postmodern Ethics 7. Derrida's Engagement with Political Philosophy 8. From the 'Death of Man' to Human Rights: The Paradigm Change in French Intellectual Life 9. 'The Democratic Literature of the Future': Richard Rorty, Postmodernism and the American Poetic Tradition 10. The Secular and the Post-Secular in the Thought of Edward Said 11. Longing For 'A Certain Kind of Future': Drucilla Cornell, Sexual Difference and the Imaginary Domain
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