Daily Archives: September 25, 2013
Risk and the New Modernity
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Simon Carter MRC Medical Sociology Unit Glasgow, United Kingdom isb002@lancaster.ac.uk Beck, Ulrich. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity. London: Sage, 1992. At 0123 hours (Soviet European Time) on Saturday 26 of April 1986, reactor number four of the Chernobyl nuclear power complex exploded, rupturing the reaction vessel and causing major structural damage to […]
Playing With Clothes
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Debra Silverman Dept. of English University of Southern California dsilverm@scf.usc.edu Garber, Marjorie. Vested Interests: Cross-Dressing and Cultural Anxiety. New York: Routledge, 1992. In March, the women’s NCAA basketball championship was played in Atlanta, Georgia, and for the first time in many years the event was sold out. The sell-out warranted a lot of […]
Women and Television
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Leslie Regan Shade Graduate Program in Communications McGill University shade@Ice.CC.McGill.CA Spigel, Lynn. Make Room for TV: Television and the Family Ideal in Postwar America. Chicago: U of Chicago Press, 1992. Spigel, Lynn, and Denise Mann, eds. Private Screenings: Television and the Female Consumer. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota Press, 1992. In the past […]
Theorizing the Culture Wars
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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J. Russell Perkin Department of English, Saint Mary’s University Halifax, N.S., Canada rperkin@science.stmarys.ca Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. Loose Canons: Notes on the Culture Wars. New York: Oxford UP, 1992. Graff, Gerald. Beyond the Culture Wars: How Teaching the Conflicts Can Revitalize American Education. New York: Norton, 1992. Spanos, William V. The […]
Comrade Gramsci’s Progeny
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Tim Watson Columbia University tw22@cunixb.cc.columbia.edu Gramsci, Antonio. Prison Notebooks. Volume 1. Ed. Joseph Buttigieg. Trans. Buttigieg and Antonio Callari. New York: Columbia University Press, 1992. Harris, David. From Class Struggle to the Politics of Pleasure: The Effects of Gramscianism on Cultural Studies. New York: Routledge, 1992. Holub, Renate. Antonio Gramsci: Beyond Marxism […]
Can You Go Home Again? A Budapest Diary 1993
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Susan Suleiman Dept. of Romance Languages and Comparative Literature Harvard University Introductory Note: The excerpts that follow are from a diary I have been keeping since early February [1993], when I began a six- month residency at the Collegium Budapest, a new Institute for Advanced Study modeled on those in Berlin and Princeton. […]
The Microstructure of Logocentrism: Sign Models in Derrida and Smolensky
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Kip Canfield Dept. of Information Systems University of Maryland canfield@icarus.ifsm.umbc.edu I. On (Pure) Rhetoric Peirce (Buchler 99) says that the task of pure rhetoric is “to ascertain the laws by which, in every scientific intelligence, one sign gives birth to another, and especially one thought brings forth another.” Sign models are metaphors that evolve […]
Reading Beyond Meaning
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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George Aichele Dept. of Philosophy and Religion, Adrian College 470-5237@mcimail.com The Theology of the Text [T]here will never be . . . any theology of the Text. (Derrida, Dissemination 258) If the text is an instance of what Jacques Derrida calls “differance,” the ineffable writing, then there can be no theology of […]
XL (Letters on Xenakis)
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Nathaniel Bobbitt Introduction and References Xenakis remains a musical figure whose methods have literary implications. To consider the personality of Xenakis, a musical and architectural thinker, becomes a means to extend literary tasks in favor of physical and sensory aspects of experience, behavior, and prerformance. Xenakis stands as a reference point on how to work […]
Talking and Thinking: David Antin in Conversation with Hazel Smith and Roger Dean
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Hazel Smith and Roger Dean H.Smith@unsw.edu.au David Antin is a “talk poet” who gives provocative talks which combine the genres of lecture, stand up comedy, story-telling and poetry. They juxtapose anecdote with poetic metaphor, philosophical and political debate with satirical comment. The talks are improvised, that is they are created during the performance and […]
“It Meant I Loved”: Louise Gluck’s Ararat
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Eric Selinger Dept. of English University of California at Los Angeles eselinger@aol.com Thanatos undercuts, overrides Eros, his sweet, belated sibling–so says Freud.1 And in Revolution in Poetic Language, her closely argued brief against paranoid Unity and culture as theology, Julia Kristeva more than agrees. Like the Accusing Angel that she calls “the text,” Kristeva […]
Marxist Pleasure: Jameson and Eagleton
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Steven Helmling Department of English University of Delaware As reading matter, contemporary Marxist criticism is pretty heavy going. First and most obviously because it inherits a long, rich and adventurous tradition not only of political and sociological but also of philosophical argument–the breadth of Marx’s own interests insured that: he aimed, and so have […]
The Excremental Sublime: The Postmodern Literature of Blockage and Release
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 03, Number 3, May 1993 |
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Roberto Maria Dainotto Dept. of Comparative Literature New York University DAINOTTR@acfcluster.nyu.edu Once a famous Hellenic philosopher, [Aesop’s] master in the dark days of his enslaved youth, had asked him why it was, when we shat, we so often turned around to examine our own turds, and he’d told that great sage the story […]
Anouncements & Advertisements
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Every issue of Postmodern Culture will carry notices of events, calls for papers, and other announcments, up to 250 words, free of charge. Advertisements will also be published on an exchange basis. Send anouncements and advertisements to: pmc@jefferson.village.virginia.edu Journal and Book Announcements: 1) _Essays in Postmodern Culture_ 2) _Black Ice Books_ […]
Selected Letters From Readers
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Paul Miers Department of English Towson State University e7e4mie@toe.towson.edu RE: Kip Canfield’s essay, “ The Microstructure of Logocentricism: Sign Models in Derrida and Smolensky,” in PMC v.3 n.3. A reply by Paul Miers, Department of English, Towson State University. Connectionism and Its Consequences Kip Canfield’s article in the last issue of Postmodern […]
The Sound of the Avant-Garde
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Timothy D. Taylor Music Department Denison University taylort@cc.denison.edu Kahn, Douglas, and Gregory Whitehead, eds. The Wireless Imagination: Sound, Radio, and the Avant-Garde. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1992. Co-editors Kahn and White describe their purpose in The Wireless Imagination as an attempt to compile a collection of “first utterances” rather than a Last Word on […]
Idioculture: De-Massifying the Popular Music Audience
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Marc Perlman Department of Music Tufts University perlman@pearl.tufts.edu Crafts, Susan D., Daniel Cavicchi, Charles Keil and the Music in Daily Life Project. My Music. Foreword by George Lipsitz. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England for Wesleyan University Press, 1993. Cultural Studies frequently constructs popular music as a particularly disruptive sort of object, […]
Fear Of Music
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Andrew Herman Department of Sociology Drake University ah7301r@acad.drake.edu Goodwin, Andrew. Dancing in the Distraction Factory: Music Televison and Popular Culture. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1992. I. Fear of Music: Postmodernism and Music Television The first time I heard the terms “postmodernism” and “the postmodern” was at the “Marxism and Interpretation of […]
Postmodernist Purity
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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John McGowan Department of English University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill jpm@unc.bitnet Owens, Craig. Beyond Recognition: Representation, Power, and Culture. Ed. Scott Bryson, Barbara Kruger, Lynne Tillman, and Jane Weinstock. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992. Craig Owens was a critic/theorist of contemporary art, best known for his essays in October and Art […]
Practice, Politique, Postmodernism
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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J.L. Lemke Sociology Department City University of New York jllbc@cunyvm.cuny.edu Bourdieu, Pierre and Lois J.D. Wacquant. An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992. I. The Text Invitation to Reflexive Sociology is a book that is not quite a text. Tiles in a genre mosaic abut one another: Fantasy […]
Postmodern Communities: The Politics of Oscillation
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Heesok Chang Department of English Vassar College hechang@vaxsar.vassar.edu Vattimo, Gianni. The Transparent Society. Trans. David Webb. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992. Agamben, Giorgio. The Coming Community. Trans. Michael Hardt. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993. I. Philosophical Homelessness Readers of the young Georg Lukacs may recall this memorable citation from […]
‘Imagining The Unimaginable’: J.M. Coetzee, History, and Autobiography
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Rita Barnard English Department University of Pennsylvania rbarnard@mail.sas.upenn.edu Attwell, David. J.M. Coetzee: South Africa and the Politics of Writing. Perspectives on South Africa 48. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1993. Coetzee, J.M. Doubling the Point: Essays and Interviews. Ed. David Attwell. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1992. David Attwell’s important […]
Authorizing Memory, Remembering Authority
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Mark Fenster Department of Telecommunications Indiana University fenster@silver.ucs.indiana.edu Schudson, Michael. Watergate in American Memory: How We Remember, Forget, and Reconstruct the Past. New York: Basic Books, 1992. Zelizer, Barbie. Covering the Body: The Kennedy Assassination, the Media, and the Shaping of Collective Memory. Chicago: U of Chicago Press, 1992. “Best Evidence is […]
If I Only Had a Brain
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Steven Shaviro Department of English University of Washington shaviro@u.washington.edu Burroughs writes: “in this life we have to take things as we find them as the torso murderer said when he discovered his victim was a quadruple amputee.” Good advice for the anatomically deranged, like Cliff Steele. He’s a character in the DC/Vertigo comic book […]
Dynamic and Thermodynamic Tropes of the Subject in Freud and in Deleuze and Guattari
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Martin Rosenberg Visiting Assistant Professor Department of English Texas A&M University mer1911@tamvm1.tamu.edu [O]rators and others who are in variance are mutually experiencing something that is bound to befall those who engage in senseless rivalry: believing that they are expressing opposite views, they fail to perceive that the theory of the opposite party is inherent […]
That Was Then: This Is Now: Ex-Changing the Phallus
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Lynda Hart Department of English The University of Pennsylvania In A Taste for Pain, Maria Marcus recounts an anecdote about a women’s studies conference in 1972. Germaine Greer, the keynote speaker, was interrupted by a young woman from the audience who suddenly cried out: “But how can we start a women’s movement when I […]
“Another Autumn Refrain” and “Two Thirds of a Second at the Center of the Universe”
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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George Bradley Another Autumn Refrain He kept trying to get it right, trying to catch That wisp of melody, that snatch of sound, listening And trying, like a man playing music, practicing scales; He kept trying to remember, though it would not come, About the leaves and the ghosts hung in […]
Mapplethorpe’s Art: Playing with the Byronic Postmodern
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Elizabeth Fay Department of English University of Massachusetts at Boston EFAY@UMBSKY.CC.UMB.EDU The term “the Byronic postmodern” is coined here specifically for the purpose of uncovering and exploring a congruency in the works of those artists invested in some aspect of the Byronic hero. The Byronic, which was both encoded by Byron and beyond his […]
A Schizoanalytic Reading of Baudelaire: The Modernist as Postmodernist
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Eugene W. Holland Department of French Language and Literature The Ohio State University eugeneh@humanities1.cohums.ohio-state.edu Whether Deleuze and Guattari were actually “doing philosophy” in the Anti-Oedipus or not, their last collaborative work Qu’est-ce que la philosophie?) may shed some light on the status of the concepts operating in that early work.1 Unlike scientific concepts, which […]
On The Bull’s Horn with Peter Handke: Debates, Failures, Essays, and a Postmodern Livre de Moi
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Stephanie Hammer Department of Literature and Languages University of California, Riverside HAMM@ucrac2.ucr.edu The time is past when we can plant ourselves in front of a Vernet and sigh along with Diderot, “How beautiful, grand, varied, noble, wise, harmonious, rigorously colored this is!” (Lyotard, “Contribution to an Idea of Postmodernity”) What a wise and […]
“It Dread Inna Inglan”: Linton Kwesi Johnson, Dread, and Dub Identity
September 25, 2013 | Posted by Webmaster under Volume 04, Number 1, September 1993 |
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Peter Hitchcock Department of English Baruch College, CUNY Postmodern Culture Version1 it is noh mistri wi mekkin histri it is noh mistri wi winnin victri (“Mekkin Histri” LKJ) “The trouble with the English is that their history happened overseas, so they don’t know what it means” (The Satanic Verses, Salman […]