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Postmodernism is not what you think : why globalization threatens modernity

Lemert, Charles C.,
Abingdon, Oxon ; Routledge, c2016.

"'Charles Lemert is one of the most thoughtful and interesting of sociology's postmodernists. He recurrently finds new angles of vision and is especially helpful for overcoming the pernicious opposition of 'micro' and 'macro' perspectives.' -Craig Calhoun, New York University (on the first edition) Highly readable, the second edition of Postmodernism Is Not What You Think responds to the widespread claim that postmodernism is over. It explains the historical connections between the postmodern and globalization. Those who wish to kill the term postmodernism still must face the facts that the former nationalistic world-system has collapsed and is slowly being replaced by a more global set of structures. The book is completely revised and updated with an entirely new section on globalization. The media and popular culture, identity politics, the science wars, politics and cultural studies, structuralism and poststructuralism, and the new sociologies are also put in perspective as signs of the new social formations dawning at the end of the modern age. Lemert shows that the postmodern is less a theory than a condition of social life brought about by the trouble modernity has gotten itself into." --

Bibliographic Information


Format: Book
Author: Lemert, Charles C., 1937-
Subject: Postmodernism
Sociology
Globalization
Publication Year:2016
Language:English
Published:Abingdon, Oxon ; Routledge, c2016.
ISBN:9781594511530
1594511535
Notes:Previous ed. : Paradigm Publishers, 2005.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 177-186) and index.
Beasts, frogs, freaks, and other postmodern things -- Postmodernism is not what you think -- An impossible glossary of social reality -- Rethinking Europe : the political realities of language -- Letters from Brazil : structuralism's zero signifier -- Remembering Vietnam : the uses of French structuralisms -- In the imperial silence, will the subaltern ever shut-up? -- On an ironic globe, what does it mean to be serious? -- If there is a we, might we call ourselves the dispossessed?
Course: CP601

Availability at HKSYU Library


Location Call number Status
English Book (4/F) 301.01 LEM 2016 Available