Postmodern style/text
Postmodern text can be identified by its eclecticism.
Erosion of aesthetic and stylistic boundaries- mixing of different styles, genre, and artistic conventions
They are designed to be read by a literate audience- exhibiting many traits of intertextuality.
Postmodern texts will employ a range of referential techniques- bricolage
Postmodernity= breaking of boundaries
Theorist- Frederic Jameson
Key ideas:
Depthlessness
Nostalgia/ erosion of history
Parody
Pastiche
Postmodern text can be identified by its eclecticism, demonstrating an erosion of aesthetic and stylistic boundaries. It reflects the pluralistic nature of contemporary culture. Eclecticism in postmodern text exhibits the mixing of different styles, genre, and artistic conventions, including those of modernism.
Modernism was about production and consumption, postmodernism emphasizes reproduction and re-consumption, the main implication being that art has become mere repetition and imitation. Modernity is fundamentally about order: about rationality, creating order out of chaos.
Hybridity is something heterogeneous – from more than one source - in origin or composition. It is the mixture of several different genre categories into one text. Examples include the mixing and sampling of different kinds and levels - of music, of material in television adverts, in films and TV Drama or comedy etc.
Postmodern text is self-reflexive demonstrating an awareness of itself as a text. It is also termed hyperconsciousness. In other words, reflexivity and self-consciousness is when a text uses references to itself or to its characters to This is where a text knows it’s a text and draws attention to its structure, production and/or conventions to the audience. In doing so, inverts itself reflecting its own reality rather than an outside one.
Voyeurism- texts obsessed by the process of looking at others or the process of looking. This suggests a society dependant on the visual consumption of others. Suggesting that people change their behaviour when they are being watched.
Erosion of aesthetic and stylistic boundaries- mixing of different styles, genre, and artistic conventions
They are designed to be read by a literate audience- exhibiting many traits of intertextuality.
Postmodern texts will employ a range of referential techniques- bricolage
Postmodernity= breaking of boundaries
Theorist- Frederic Jameson
Key ideas:
Depthlessness
Nostalgia/ erosion of history
Parody
Pastiche
Postmodern text can be identified by its eclecticism, demonstrating an erosion of aesthetic and stylistic boundaries. It reflects the pluralistic nature of contemporary culture. Eclecticism in postmodern text exhibits the mixing of different styles, genre, and artistic conventions, including those of modernism.
Modernism was about production and consumption, postmodernism emphasizes reproduction and re-consumption, the main implication being that art has become mere repetition and imitation. Modernity is fundamentally about order: about rationality, creating order out of chaos.
Hybridity is something heterogeneous – from more than one source - in origin or composition. It is the mixture of several different genre categories into one text. Examples include the mixing and sampling of different kinds and levels - of music, of material in television adverts, in films and TV Drama or comedy etc.
Postmodern text is self-reflexive demonstrating an awareness of itself as a text. It is also termed hyperconsciousness. In other words, reflexivity and self-consciousness is when a text uses references to itself or to its characters to This is where a text knows it’s a text and draws attention to its structure, production and/or conventions to the audience. In doing so, inverts itself reflecting its own reality rather than an outside one.
Voyeurism- texts obsessed by the process of looking at others or the process of looking. This suggests a society dependant on the visual consumption of others. Suggesting that people change their behaviour when they are being watched.
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