This comes to only point out the fact that the role of postmodernism is essential because it offers a different perspective through which humans can understand the events taking place around them and can interpret them to provide meanings that would be useful in their own development and in the development of the social being.
One of the important aspects of postmodernism is that unlike other theories that have been advocated throughout the decades, this approach takes into account the human perception of things. The development of this trend was essential because the human individual needed a framework through which it could accept, acknowledge and deal with the changes taking place around it. More precisely, at the end of the 19th century, the issue of industrialization together with the huge developments that were taking place at the level of the political changes, economic burst, and cultural revolutions set the human individual as a mere spectator to its surroundings. Harold Chorny in "City of dreams. Social Theory and the Urban Experience" considers the way in which industrialism played a part in the de-humanization of the human being. More precisely, he points out that "of all the changes that nineteenth century capitalism introduced into the world of Western society the rise of modern industrial metropolis involved the most profound alterations in the daily experiences of human beings"
. Therefore, there was a need for an approach that would eventually respond to this changes as a result of "a quest for a solution to the alienation they felt in the face of the conditions they encountered"
The approach taken by Chorney reflects in fact one of the most important conditions for establishing a new line of thought. At the end of the nineteenth century the advancement of technology, be in at the industrial level or in terms of agriculture, have forever changed the way in which the human being was in the center of social being and economic advancement. The Industrial revolution not only provided an impressive means of development but also placed on the second spot the capacity of the human being to act as main actor on the economic and social scene. This change determined several other changes that came once the economic boost of the nineteenth century confirmed. The development of cities and the rise of the megalopolis structure reflected in the way in which humans acted. The change was dramatic particularly because it provided a new environment for socialization, which would be considerably less personal than that prior to the nineteenth century. People would be carried away by mechanization and in the end by an increased limitation of personal contact and influence. This in turn determines a sense of alienation that is growingly common in today's society.
Postmodernism from this point-of-view brought back the role of the human individual in the society and provided a new meaning to it. The postmodernist thought considers right the difference of opinion and the expression of individual personality. The role postmodernism offers to the capacity to interpret (as postmodernism mostly relies on the individual capacity to interpret) is essential to drive society forward and create an environment that is not static or flat. The contributions of every individual through personal interpretation provide essence to the social structure.
Postmodernism has provided human kind with the "excuse" for stating one's mind. More precisely, the approach of postmodernism offers legitimacy for human contribution to all walks of life by legitimizing the exchange of knowledge through interpretation. "We may thus expect a thorough exteriorization of knowledge with respect to the "knower," at whatever point he or she may occupy in the knowledge process. The old principle that the acquisition of knowledge is indissociable from the training (Bildung) of minds, or even of individuals, is becoming obsolete and will become ever more so. The relationships of the suppliers and users of knowledge to the knowledge they supply and use is now tending, and will increasingly tend, to assume the form already taken by the relationship of commodity producers and consumers to the commodities they produce and consume -- that is, the form of value. Knowledge is and will be produced in order to be sold, it is and will be consumed in order to be valorized in a new production: in both cases, the goal is exchange."
Postmodernist approaches have provided the background for these types of exchanges.
Postmodernism is extremely relevant for the political arena largely because postmodernism does not...
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