LEADER 04651nam 2200577Ia 450 001 9910963263303321 005 20251116173517.0 010 $a0-8093-1887-3 010 $a0-203-20517-0 010 $a1-134-84592-8 010 $a1-134-84591-X 010 $a0-203-28817-3 010 $a1-280-03237-5 035 $a(CKB)1000000000255087 035 $a(EBL)168223 035 $a(OCoLC)475875592 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC168223 035 $a(EXLCZ)991000000000255087 100 $a19920520d1993 ub 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcnu|||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 14$aThe parameters of postmodernism /$fNicholas Zurbrugg 205 $a1st ed. 210 $aCarbondale $cSouthern Illinois University Press$dc1993 215 $a1 online resource (201 p.) 300 $aDescription based upon print version of record. 311 08$a0-415-10561-7 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $aBook Cover; Title; Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Anti-Art or Ante-Art?; Monumental Art or Submonumental Art?; Eagleton and the Apocalyptic Fallacy; Introducing the B-Effect; Introducing the C-Effect; Deploring/Exploring Hyperspace: Jameson and Cage; Stupefaction or Enlivenment?; Benjamin and the Loss of Aura; Barthes, Belsey, and the Death of the Author; Brger and the Death of the Avant-Garde; Bonito-Oliva, Baudrillard, and the Collapse of the New; Beckett, Brecht, and the Attractions of Antinarrative; Beckett's Poetics of Failure/Brecht's Poetics of Interrogation 327 $aBeckett, Brecht, and the Groan of the Text Eagleton, Jameson, and Dehistoricized Culture; Cage, Kostelanetz, and Value Judgments; Jameson, Rauschenberg, and Premature Exasperation; Cage, Rauschenberg, and Ryman; Cage and Consumption; Collective Narrative and the Struggle with Simulacra; Depersonalized Culture or Repersonalized Culture?; Cage and the Antilogic of the Text; Beckett, Cage, and Nothing; Beckett, Cage, and Programmatic Composition; Purposeful Purposelessness or Nothing to Be Done?; Jameson, Bourdieu, and the Destruction of Art and Taste; Chion, Cage, and New Aesthetic Rationales 327 $aPostmodernism's Purist Aesthetic Postmodernism's Hybrid Aesthetic; Feldman, Crazy Contradiction, and the Conceptual, Artistic Life; Pure ~H~; Habermas and Communicative Rationality; Beuys, Adorno, and the Silence of Marcel Duchamp; Beuys, Cage, Buchloh, and the B-B-Effect; Jappe, Jameson, and the Concept of Utopia; Bense, Concrete Poetry, and the Dwindling of the Poetic Element; Chopin, Human Vitality, and Technological Civilization; Conz and the New Saints of the Avant-Garde; A Problem in Design: Lax and Mann; Postmodernism at Two Speeds: Hassan, Janco, and Seuphor 327 $aRainer, Robbe-Grillet, Reich, and the Turn to Interobjectivity Robbe-Grillet and the Re-turn to the Subjective Type of Writing; Rainer and the Re-turn to Identity; Reich and the Re-turn to Historical Realities; Multimedia Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction: Gaburo and Ashley; Monk and the Re-turn to Recurrence; Umberto Eco and the Re-turn to the Middle Ages; Grass and the Destruction of Mankind; Grass, Mann, and the Re-turn to Forbidden Literature; Ernst, Carrington, and the Re-turn of Surrealism; Carrington, Cage, Beuys, and the Poetics of Resistance 327 $aCage, Carrington, Barthes, Burroughs, Bense: From Artha to Moksha Cage, Wolf, and the Re-turn to the Third Alternative; Wolf, Mann, and the Authority of Literary Genres; Miller, Beuys, and the Elevation of the Berlin Wall; Miller, Brecht, and the Petrification of Hope; Miller, Wilson, and the Re-turn to the Classics; Huyssen and the Endgame of the Avant-Garde; Huyssen, Popper, and the Electrification of the Avant-Garde; Buuel, Breton, Benjamin, Baudrillard, and the Myths of Mechanical Depersonalization; DeLillo, Miller, Lyotard, Kroker, and the Panic Sensibility 327 $aBallard, The Kindness of Women, and Catharsis 330 $aThis ground-breaking work draws upon the authors interviews with leading postmodern artists, including Baudrillard, Beckett, Cage and Glass. It offers a challenging and positive view of postmodern culture. 606 $aPostmodernism (Literature) 606 $aPostmodernism 615 0$aPostmodernism (Literature) 615 0$aPostmodernism. 676 $a809/.04 700 $aZurbrugg$b Nicholas$0457338 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910963263303321 996 $aParameters of postmodernism$9184499 997 $aUNINA