Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- THE CASE FOR POSTMODERNISM AS SOCIAL THEORY
- 1 The postmodern condition
- 2 Genealogy and social criticism
- 3 Method, social science, and social hope
- 4 The new cultural politics of difference
- 5 A manifesto for cyborgs: Science, technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s
- CONTESTING FOUNDATIONS: THE CRISIS OF REPRESENTATION
- HUMAN STUDIES AS RHETORIC, NARRATIVE, AND CRITIQUE
- POSTMODERN SOCIAL ANALYSIS: EMPIRICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
4 - The new cultural politics of difference
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Introduction
- THE CASE FOR POSTMODERNISM AS SOCIAL THEORY
- 1 The postmodern condition
- 2 Genealogy and social criticism
- 3 Method, social science, and social hope
- 4 The new cultural politics of difference
- 5 A manifesto for cyborgs: Science, technology, and socialist feminism in the 1980s
- CONTESTING FOUNDATIONS: THE CRISIS OF REPRESENTATION
- HUMAN STUDIES AS RHETORIC, NARRATIVE, AND CRITIQUE
- POSTMODERN SOCIAL ANALYSIS: EMPIRICAL ILLUSTRATIONS
Summary
In these last few years of the 20th century, there is emerging a significant shift in the sensibilities and outlooks of critics and artists. In fact, I would go so far as to claim that a new kind of cultural worker is in the making, associated with a new politics of difference. These new forms of intellectual consciousness advance reconceptions of the vocation of critic and artist, attempting to undermine the prevailing disciplinary divisions of labor in the academy, museum, mass media and gallery networks, while preserving modes of critique within the ubiquitous commodification of culture in the global village. Distinctive features of the new cultural politics of difference are to trash the monolithic and homogeneous in the name of diversity, multiplicity and heterogeneity; to reject the abstract, general and universal in light of the concrete, specific and particular; and to historicize, contextualize and pluralize by highlighting the contingent, provisional, variable, tentative, shifting and changing. Needless to say, these gestures are not new in the history of criticism or art, yet what makes them novel – along with the cultural politics they produce – is how and what constitutes difference, the weight and gravity it is given in representation and the way in which highlighting issues like exterminism, empire, class, race, gender, sexual orientation, age, nation, nature, and region at this historical moment acknowledges some discontinuity and disruntion from previous forms of cultural critique.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Postmodern TurnNew Perspectives on Social Theory, pp. 65 - 81Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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