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Postmodernism and the Digital Era

Author

  • Fernando Flores

Summary, in English

The concept ‘postmodernism’ refers to a very complex ideological movement concerning the entire cognitive field; from music to architecture, from film to philosophy and from technology to sociology. As an academic ‘subject’ or object of study, its origin can be dated to the midst of the 1980’s, but as a historical process, the dating is more difficult. Some writers associate the birth of postmodernism to Husserl’s phenomenological revolution.

The starting point of postmodernism could also be determined from ‘modernism’. We could try to follow the modernistic movement and seek to determine its crisis and dissolution. Nevertheless, problems rise with that determination, due to the variety of references to one and the same concept. ‘Modernism’ means one thing in literary history and another in the history of ideas. In literary history, modernism is associated to the works of Joyce, Eliot, Pound, Proust and Kafka. It is associated to a new form of writing that develops during the beginning of the 20th century and whose characteristics, among others, is the impressionistic discourse, the subjectivity, the variety of perspectives, the fragmentation of forms and non-continuous discourses.

Publishing year

2007

Language

English

Document type

Book

Publisher

Department of Informatics, Lund University

Topic

  • Information Systems, Social aspects
  • Cultural Studies

Keywords

  • Artificial Life
  • Popular Culture
  • Surveillance
  • Postmodernism
  • Digital Era
  • Ecological Movement

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISBN: 978-91-633-1105-5