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This is the postmodernism age from 1940-2001. Postmodernism has influenced many cultural fields like,... Show More
This is the postmodernism age from 1940-2001. Postmodernism has influenced many cultural fields like, literary criticism, sociology, linguistics, architecture, anthropology, visual arts, and music. Listed in the timeline are some of the most historic events, songs, film, television programmes and pieces of art in those years. Show Less
1939
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Frederico de Onis, describes and defines 'postmodernismo' as a conservative reaction within modernism (in contradistinction to 'ultra-modernism' which positively encourages the radical impulses to modernism). 'Postmodernismo' comes into widespread usage in Hispanic cultural circles.
1941
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Pearl harbor
1945
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W.W. II ends
1948
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Gandhi assassinated in India
1950
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Korean War begins
1951
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Charles Olson U.S. poet : defines many 20th Century poets and writers as “post-humanist, post-historic”.
1957
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Soviets launch Sputnik; space race with U.S. begins
1958
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C. W. Mills uses the term post-modern to define a 'third way' to the 'statisms' of capitalism and communism. The social theorist Irving Howe suggests the idea of the post-modern too.
1958
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Discovery of DNA structure launches genetic science
1958
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First stereo records issued -58
1958
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"Lolita" by Vladimir Nabokov
1958
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NASA founded
1960
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U.S. sociologist, Daniel Bell, publishes his book, 'The End of Ideology'. This is the first of a trilogy of books by Bell in which he argues that western societies are entering a new phase/era which he calls 'the post-industrial society'.
1961
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Berlin Wall erected
1963
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President John F. Kennedy assassinated
1963
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The Beatles make UK headlines, Beatlemania is born
1963
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. leads Civil Rights march in Washington
1965
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First space walk
1965
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Lelie Friedler, cultural critic, argues there o be a new sensuality of youth expressing itself in a new ‘post-modern’ literature.
A number of 'postmodern' artistic movements develop: Pop Art, Minimalism and Conceptualism (latterly 'Global Conceptualism').
1966
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Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
1967
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Guy Debord, the French Situationist, writes his, The Society of the Spectacle.
1968
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Amitai Etzioni, the U.S. sociologist uses the idea of the postmodern in his book 'Active Society'.
1968
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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Senator Robert Kennedy assassinated
1971
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"The Dismemberment of Orpheus: Toward a Postmodern Literature" by Ihab Hassan
1971
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Ihab Hassan writes 'The Postmodern Turn'. He inverts Onis' definition (see above) of postmodernism as conservative and suggests instead that postmodernism is progressive. He argues that postmodernism is the ally of U.S. philosophical pragmatism.
1972
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New literary journal: ‘Boundary 2’, subtitled ‘Journal of Postmodern Literature’.
1972
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U.S. Architect, Robert Venturi has his book, 'Learning from Las Vegas', published. This can be taken as something of a manifesto for those architects who, like Venturi, wanted to reject the dominant 'school' of modernism in architecture. They suggested that the 'commercial strip' of Las Vegas presented a positive challenge to progressive architects. The publication coincides with the demolition of the Pruitt-Igoe housing development in St. Louis, U.S.A. with dynamite. For Charles Jencks this is the symbolic end of 'high modernism' in architecture and the beginning of postmodern architecture.
1972
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Watergate break-in
1974
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Daniel Bell publishes: 'The Coming of Post-Industrial Society : A Venture in Social Forecasting'. This together with his earlier work, 'The End of Ideology : On the Exhaustion of Political Ideas in the Fifties,' suggest that modern societies are moving into another era, of a post-industrial, knowledge society.
1974
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Jean Baudrillard's, 'The Mirror of Production' is published. This is the first text from Baudrillard in which he breaks with Marxism.
1975
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French sociologist, Alain Touraine's, 'The post-industrial society : tomorrow's social history : classes, conflicts and culture in the programmed society' is published in English.
1976
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Daniel Bell writes, 'The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism' in which he argues against what he sees as a hyper-individualism and lack of civic responsibility in U.S. society.
1977
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The Passion of New Eve by Angela Carter
1977
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The first edition of, Charles Jencks', 'Language of Post-Modern Architecture' is published. He argues that postmodern architecture is based on a 'double-coding'!
1978
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Edward Said's, 'Orientalism' is published. Suggested to be the text that initiates the specialist 'field' later to be called postcolonialism.
1978
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First test-tube baby born in Britain
1978
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The two-volume, 'Marx's Capital and Capitalism Today' is published.
1978
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Though nominally authored as 'Cutler, T et al', the impulse for this work came from Paul Hirst (now Professor at Birkbeck College) and Barry Hindess. 'Hindess & Hirst' were an intellectual force in the 1970s, beginning with their work on the journal 'Theoretical Practice', through 'Pre Capitalist Modes of Production' and to the volumes cited above. Hindess and Hirst's initial project had been (in the wake of Althusser's attempt to do same) to address the theoretical problems in Marxist theory and to reinvigorate that theory for the late 20th century. In fact by 'Marx's Capital..' they had come to the conclusion that Marxism was fatally flawed. 'Marx's Capital..' is a rigorous demonstration of the Hegelian influences on Marx's work.
1979
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Punk Rock emerges and though initially a critical/oppositional cultural form, it soon develops into an avant-garde/elitist form of 'pop' and rock music.
1979
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"The Postmodern Condition" by Jean-François Lyotard
1979
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Margaret Thatcher becomes Britain's first woman prime minister
1979
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U.S.-Iran hostage crisis begins
1981
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First space-shuttle flight
1981
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Frederic Jameson publishes 'Post-modernism'. The book is an attempt to synthesise the (economics) of the work of Marxist Ernest Mandel (in 'Late Capitalism') and Baudrillard's early work (when, effectively, Baudrillard was still a Marxist). Jameson was to cite/sight the Bonaventura Hotel in Los Angeles as an example of a postmodern architecture which forces individuals to expand our senses and bodies.
1981
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"Simulacra and Simulation" by Jean Baudrillard
1983
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"Postmodernism and Consumer Society" by Fredric Jameson
1984
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Fourth Challenger flight, first-ever untethered space walk
1984
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'Order Out of Chaos', by Ilya Prigogine & Isabelle Stengers is published. Suggested to be a landmark of postmodern science.
1985
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"White Noise" by Don DeLillo
1986
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A Postmodern Law? Peter Goodrich publishes 'Reading The Law'.
1987
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"Toward a Concept of Postmodernism" by Ihab Hassan
1988
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Gianni Vattimo's, The End of Modernity: Nihilism and Hermeneutics. In Post-Modern Critique, is published
1988
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Linda Hutcheon's, 'A Poetics of Postmodernism' is published. It's indicative of a growing interest in postmodernist theory, amongst Feminists.
1988
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Live/animated film "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," directed by Robert Zemeckis
1989
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The Panic Encyclopedia, "The Definitive Guide to the Postmodern Scene" is first published. The encyclopedia is authored by Arthur and David Cook, both of whom may be described as apocalyptic postmodernists.
1989
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Berlin Wall falls
1990
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David Harvey's book 'The condition of Postmodernity' is published. The book is, like Jameson's, written from a Marxist perspective. Harvey, in similar vein to Jameson argues that postmodernism is a particular stage in the development of capitalism.
1990
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Giddens', 'The Consequences of Modernity' is published. Giddens rejects the view that the west has entered a new era of postmodernity. On the contrary, the west has entered a phase of 'high modernity'. He will later argue that this 'high modernity' is based upon a increased 'reflexivity': more formally, a 'reflexive modernization'
1990
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Gulf War
1990
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Nelson Mandela freed from prison
1991
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Mike Featherstone's, 'Consumer Culture & Postmodernism' is published. The book seeks to define postmodernism from a largely neo-Weberian perspective.
1991
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Zygmunt Bauman's, 'Modernity & Ambivalence' is published. Bauman rejects the idea of the 'end of modernity' and thus that we have entered a new stage of society. For Bauman postmodernity is modernity coming to terms with its paradoxes.
1993
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'Written on the Body' by Jeanette Winterson
1994
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"Hyper/Text/Theory" by George Landow
1994
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"Just the Fax, Ma’am: or, Postmodernism’s Journey to Decenter" by Michael Bérubé
1994
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"Pulp Fiction," directed by Quentin Tarantino
1995
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The Return of (neo) Functionalism 1: suggests a critique of post-modernism. Alexander argues that we live in a Neo-modern era
1996
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Yet another Marxist critique. This time from British literary critic and Thomas Wharton Professor of English at the University of Oxford, Terry Eagleton. The book, 'The Allusions of Postmodernism', is a critique of the ideological foundations of postmodernism. Eagleton suggests postmodernism to be the outcome of a 'failure of nerve' in sections of the political 'left'.
1997
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Charles Lemert offers another set of categories of postmodernism(s) in his book, 'Postmodernism Is Not What You Think', Best & Kellner suggest a categorisation of postmodernism
1998
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Dennis Smith defines postmodernity as modernity's 'serpent'
1999
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Disgrace is a novel by J. M. Coetzee
2001
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Terrorists attack World Trade Centre NYC killing thousands