Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- THE CASE FOR POSTMODERNISM AS SOCIAL THEORY
- CONTESTING FOUNDATIONS: THE CRISIS OF REPRESENTATION
- HUMAN STUDIES AS RHETORIC, NARRATIVE, AND CRITIQUE
- 10 Is there a postmodern sociology?
- 11 On ethnographic allegory
- 12 Rhetoric, textuality, and the postmodern turn in sociological theory
- 13 Social criticism without philosophy: An encounter between feminism and postmodernism
- POSTMODERN SOCIAL ANALYSIS: EMPIRICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
10 - Is there a postmodern sociology?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- THE CASE FOR POSTMODERNISM AS SOCIAL THEORY
- CONTESTING FOUNDATIONS: THE CRISIS OF REPRESENTATION
- HUMAN STUDIES AS RHETORIC, NARRATIVE, AND CRITIQUE
- 10 Is there a postmodern sociology?
- 11 On ethnographic allegory
- 12 Rhetoric, textuality, and the postmodern turn in sociological theory
- 13 Social criticism without philosophy: An encounter between feminism and postmodernism
- POSTMODERN SOCIAL ANALYSIS: EMPIRICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
Summary
Why do we need the concept of ‘postmodernity’? On the face of it, this concept is redundant. In so far as it purports to capture and articulate what is novel at the present stage of western history, it legitimizes itself in terms of a job which has been already performed by other, better established concepts – like those of the ‘post-capitalist’ or ‘post-industrial’ society. Concepts which have served the purpose well: they sharpened our attention to what is new and discontinuous, and offered a reference point for counter-arguments in favour of continuity.
Is, therefore, the advent of the ‘postmodernity’ idea an invitation to rehash or simply replay an old debate? Does it merely signify an all-too-natural fatigue, which a protracted and inconclusive debate must generate? Is it merely an attempt to inject new excitement into an increasingly tedious pastime (as Gordon Allport once said, we social scientists never solve problems; we only get bored with them)? If this is the case, then the idea of ‘postmodernity’ is hardly worth a second thought, and this is exactly what many a seasoned social scientist suggests.
Appearances are, however, misleading (and the advocates and the detractors of the idea of ‘postmodernity’ share the blame for confusion). The concept of ‘postmodernity’ may well capture and articulate a quite different sort of novelty than those the older, apparently similar concents accommodated and theorized.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Postmodern TurnNew Perspectives on Social Theory, pp. 187 - 204Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
- 10
- Cited by