Postmodernism
In order to understand the current themes in philosophy of postmodernism and post structuralism, it is important that we understand the structuralists themes, which dominated the philosophical thinking in the twentieth century and influenced many postmodernists and post-structuralists. In the early and mid 20th century there were a number of structural theories develop to explain human existence. In his study of language, the structural linguist Ferdinand Saussaaure (1857-1913) proposed that "meaning" was to be found within the structure of a whole language and the system of language rather than in the analysis of individual words. He suggested that by studying language we will be able to understand how the human beings create meaning and how this process is connected to practice. For the Marxist, the truth of human existence could be understood by an analysis of economic structures. While the Psychoanalyst attempted to describe the structure of the psyche in terms of an unconscious [Sarup, 1993].
In the late 1960s the structuralist's movement, which was based in France, attempted to synthesize the ideas of Saussaaure, Freud and Marx. Thinkers like Claude Levi-Strauss and Lacan developed structuralism, which was against the existentialist doctrine, which claimed that man is what he makes himself. For these structuralists the individual is shaped by sociological, psychological and linguistic structures over which he/she has no control, but which could be understood and uncovered by using structuralists methods.
In the late 1960s three French thinkers, Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida and Gilles Deleuz devised new methods of analysis to understand human existence; their methods were sharply influenced by German philosopher Nietzsche. These thinkers did not disagree with the structuralists that language and society shaped the individual (they were very critical of Freud and psychoanalysts) but they disagreed that there were definite underlying structures that could explain human condition. Thus these thinkers although very diverse in thinking and also critical of each other have come to designate, what has been called Post-Structuralism [Madan, 1993].
Michel Foucault is seen as one of the most important representative of the post-structuralists movement. In his historical and genealogical analysis, namely "Madness and Civilization," "The Order of Things" "Discipline and Punish" and "History of Sexuality" Foucault proposed a new concept of power which has played an important role in the current philosophical thinking. Foucault showed how the human sciences (knowledge) were intertwined with mechanism of power. His main thesis was that meaning is not fixed it changes from society to society and from one period to another. Thus he suggested a kind of cultural relativity; he also challenged the concept of the author (as an authority) and said that the author has become obsolete by the power of the reader in the interpretation of text [Koray, 1999].
Derrida on the other hand developed a new technique called deconstruction, which attempts to uncover the multiple interpretations of texts. Derrida suggests that all text has ambiguity and because of this the possibility of a final and complete interpretation is impossible. Thus there is no fixed meaning in the words or language, meaning is created and constructed and it is purely subjective. Derrida in his magnum opus "of Grammatology" also suggests that our whole language is metaphorical and this is the reason why there cannot be a fixed meaning. Meaning for Derrida is depended upon the reader's experiences, thus Derrida's theory of Differance lie in the belief of the inadequacy of language. Derrida aims to show that every text inevitably undermines its own claims to determine a definite meaning [Quigley, 1998].
Post-Structuralism and Postmodernists basically argue that "truth" is relative, it says that language is rooted in culture and its practice, thus it always favors that particular culture. Meaning on the other hand is not objective but depends on the experience of the individual. For both Foucault and Derrida 'texts' is not a natural reflection of the world. Text structures our interpretation of the world. The whole post-structuralists thought conclude that we live in a relative world in which all attempts to find an objective meaning is futile. I short Post-structuralism is an understanding of the tensions between ideas of the human condition as being ruled by fixed structures and the ideas that human beings are completely free. Post-structuralists indeterminacy entails the rejection of a belief in absolute truth and, accordingly, a rejection of the belief in unitary, autonomous selfhood. Post-Structuralism and Post-modernism has created a void and these modes of thought have given...
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