No one is better than Jameson at defining modernity and postmodernity and addressing the many paradoxes surrounding any attempt at periodization. To me his ability to think and re-think modernity and postmodernity seems to be his most valuable and lasting contribution to literary theory. And since he can go on about anything from architecture to literature to painting to film Jameson can be very entertaining. If you have to spend your time with just one social thinker or cultural critic Jameson would be the one to spend time with. However, after awhile, all the fancy re-formulations of Walter Benjamin, Herbert Marcuse, Theodor Adorno, Georg Lukacs...and all the sexy talk of paradigm shifts, seductive as it is, just starts to sound, well, so very dated. Ultimately, there is very little that is original in his thought when all is said and done as Jameson is not introducing anything new in the realm of social and political theory. What Jameson does and does well in these arenas is synthesize other peoples thoughts. Unfortunately for his more eclectic readers (that sounds odd, who could be more eclectic than Jameson?) Jameson doesn't really come across as all that eclectic as he's only attracted to one school of thought: the Frankfurt school. Its there he began and its to those thinkers that he returns time and again. Like his favorite marxists, Jameson has been detecting utopian impulses in mass culture since grad school. So even though Jameson looks at a variety of cultural objects in his work he always reads those cultural objects through the same marxist paradigm. Because he is always "engaged" in the Sartrean sense there is always something exciting about his work; at the same time because he never ventures outside his beloved marxist paradigm there is always something reductive about it as well. Despite being exceptionally gifted at refitting Marx in fashionable new prose every few years its really the same old same old. I think the most productive way to view marxism is to view it as a critique of humanism. This is also a productive way to view feminism and postcolonialism. As critiques they are each of inestimable value, but thinking through only one critique of humanist thought is limiting. To be fair Jameson does touch on feminist and postcolonial concerns but there is never any doubt when reading Jameson that there is a hierarchy of concerns in his work and its those (all white, all male, all western) Frankfurt marxists who have Jameson's ear and are setting his agenda.
Jameson's real nemesis, as he defines it, is postmodernism. But the postmodern means so many different things to so many different thinkers. For some it defines an epoch; for others its merely a style of reflection or state of mind (which maybe amounts to the same thing). Some might even say that it describes a utopian state of mind because it describes a state of mind that is no longer worried about history or the government. But its a confusing word because its used to describe both a style of thinking or critique and the art object or epoch being critiqued. For hardline marxists the postmodern spells trouble because as a style of critique it means a whole new level of disengagment from real politics. Though Jameson's long engagement with the postmodern is presented as an ever-evolving critique of the modern/postmodern, to some like Terry Eagleton, Jameson's style of critique is itself really just another form of political disengagment. And I am sympathetic with Eagleton's view because in Jameson's books there is always a certain ambivalence as to whether calling something "postmodern" is a compliment or a criticism. Reading Jameson is a bit like reading the New York Times or Jorge Luis Borges: you get a bit of everything but what you don't get are any practicable solutions; just a sense that rigorous thinking, even thinking that leads nowhere in particular, is good for you.
Don't get me wrong, Jameson is exciting for first-timers and I don't want to rob anyone of the pleasure of encountering Jameson at his best, but for that best I would go to _The Political Unconscious_ (a tome you will find on the shelf of every well-intentioned intellectual) or the hefty and heady _Postmodernism: The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism_ (the favorite of art lovers who dabble in social & political theory). As for _Archaeologies of the Future_, this will feel like a one-note exercise (and a familiar note at that) to anyone who has read the previous two tomes mentioned.
Maybe I'm just too firmly entrenched in a postmodern logic that is skeptical about everything, even itself, but to me it seems we postmodern subjects are brave precisely because we do not think in utopian terms. Utopians like to present themselves as liberatory thinkers but theres always something about thinking in utopian terms that reeks of an absolutist exercise and we postmoderns (who are not by any means a unifed group) are tired of the totalizing dogmas of the grand systemizers (& synthesizers). When you get down to it nothing is more boring than utopia because in utopia we are either a) victims of excessive social engineering, or, b) beings who no longer live in recognizably human forms and are thus no longer recognizably human. We love our half-finished world (with all of its half-finished liberal projects) and we love not knowing the future because knowing the future means that we know ourselves and we humans need a bit of mystery. Most of us know what we will be doing tomorrow at high noon but only because we are creatures of habit, but we also know that if we really want to we can change our routine. The same can be said of societies. The point of this entire book (and of much philosophy, social and cultural theory) is that by tomorrow at high noon we could all very well be doing something entirely different. But why a whole tome for this entirely relevant but entirely transparent point? We needed the Frankfurt marxists to tell us about utopian urges when they were deeply embedded in mass culture but why do we need marxists to tell us about utopian urges in science fiction when those urges are readily apparent?
Modernists and postmodernists alike love to theorize change. (The difference between these two groups may just be that the latter group simply suffers from a more pronounced sense of cognitive insecurity). But the future (the one beyond tomorrow) and the past for that matter are simply elsewheres that never materialize. To a certain extent we are shapers of our life-worlds and yet we are also inheritors of a life-world that pre-dates us. We, as individuals and collectives, are humbled by the fact that we are not the sole creators of the world and that our dreams alone do not alter the fabric of existence. What we can do is make slight alterations (hopefully improvements) in the present. Piecemeal change is what a humanity that knows its limits (as well as its potentialities) can do and do effectively (or at least can do effectively at times). Its those who work well with others ( those who are a little bit of everything: marxist, feminist, postcolonial, postmodern, globalist...) who get things done. For this reason humanism, at its best, is and has always been eclectic. Like everything else humanism changes shape as it adjusts itself to and integrates new knowledges with old. Jameson is one of the few thinkers whose synthetic abilites allow him to move with the times. That said the very eclectic and very refined lens through which he views postmodernity, and, in this book, science fiction, is crafted to perform a very particular project and Jameson's project can be defined as an attempt to detect general tendencies in a time period or genre. What Jameson is not particularly effective at doing is determining what makes individual authors and works so powerful. Thus as a social thinker who thinks in broad strokes he is always interesting (if also always somewhat derivative) but as a literary thinker his method is not the most subtle when you get into the nuances of literary and human value.
無料のKindleアプリをダウンロードして、スマートフォン、タブレット、またはコンピューターで今すぐKindle本を読むことができます。Kindleデバイスは必要ありません。
ウェブ版Kindleなら、お使いのブラウザですぐにお読みいただけます。
携帯電話のカメラを使用する - 以下のコードをスキャンし、Kindleアプリをダウンロードしてください。
Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions ハードカバー – 2005/10/17
英語版
Fredric Jameson
(著)
Archaeologies of the Future, Jameson’s most substantial work since Postmodernism, Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, investigates the development of this form since Thomas More, and interrogates the functions of utopian thinking in a post-Communist age.
The relationship between utopia and science fiction is explored through the representations of otherness—alien life and alien worlds—and a study of the works of Philip K. Dick, Ursula LeGuin, William Gibson, Brian Aldiss, Kim Stanley Robinson and more. Jameson’s essential essays, including “The Desire Called Utopia,” conclude with an examination of the opposing positions on utopia and an assessment of its political value today.Archaeologies of the Future is the third volume, after Postmodernism and A Singular Modernity, of Jameson’s project on the Poetics of Social Forms.
The relationship between utopia and science fiction is explored through the representations of otherness—alien life and alien worlds—and a study of the works of Philip K. Dick, Ursula LeGuin, William Gibson, Brian Aldiss, Kim Stanley Robinson and more. Jameson’s essential essays, including “The Desire Called Utopia,” conclude with an examination of the opposing positions on utopia and an assessment of its political value today.Archaeologies of the Future is the third volume, after Postmodernism and A Singular Modernity, of Jameson’s project on the Poetics of Social Forms.
- 本の長さ431ページ
- 言語英語
- 出版社Verso
- 発売日2005/10/17
- 寸法1.68 x 0.36 x 2.44 cm
- ISBN-101844670333
- ISBN-13978-1844670338
商品の説明
レビュー
“Fredric Jameson is America’s leading Marxist critic. A prodigiously energetic thinker whose writings sweep majestically from Sophocles to science fiction ... . A vast treasure trove of a book.”—Terry Eagleton
著者について
Fredric Jameson is Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature at Duke University. The author of numerous books, he has over the last three decades developed a richly nuanced vision of Western culture’s relation to political economy. He was a recipient of the 2008 Holberg International Memorial Prize. He is the author of many books, including Postmodernism, Or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism, The Cultural Turn, A Singular Modernity, The Modernist Papers, Archaeologies of the Future, Brecht and Method, Ideologies of Theory, Valences of the Dialectic, The Hegel Variations and Representing Capital.
登録情報
- 出版社 : Verso (2005/10/17)
- 発売日 : 2005/10/17
- 言語 : 英語
- ハードカバー : 431ページ
- ISBN-10 : 1844670333
- ISBN-13 : 978-1844670338
- 寸法 : 1.68 x 0.36 x 2.44 cm
- カスタマーレビュー:
著者について
著者をフォローして、新作のアップデートや改善されたおすすめを入手してください。
著者の本をもっと発見したり、よく似た著者を見つけたり、著者のブログを読んだりしましょう
カスタマーレビュー
星5つ中4つ
5つのうち4つ
全体的な星の数と星別のパーセンテージの内訳を計算するにあたり、単純平均は使用されていません。当システムでは、レビューがどの程度新しいか、レビュー担当者がAmazonで購入したかどうかなど、特定の要素をより重視しています。 詳細はこちら
2グローバルレーティング
虚偽のレビューは一切容認しません
私たちの目標は、すべてのレビューを信頼性の高い、有益なものにすることです。だからこそ、私たちはテクノロジーと人間の調査員の両方を活用して、お客様が偽のレビューを見る前にブロックしています。 詳細はこちら
コミュニティガイドラインに違反するAmazonアカウントはブロックされます。また、レビューを購入した出品者をブロックし、そのようなレビューを投稿した当事者に対して法的措置を取ります。 報告方法について学ぶ
他の国からのトップレビュー
Doug Anderson
5つ星のうち3.0
From the Perspective of a Confirmed Anti-Utopian Humanist
2007年2月13日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Lost Lacanian
5つ星のうち5.0
Histories of the Present
2006年1月25日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
What is Utopia? And what relevance does it have today? These are the questions Jameson wants to ask and answer in this, his latest and most substantial offering since "A Singular Modernity." "Archaelologies of the Future" picks up Jameson's larger project entitled "The Poetics of the Social Forms" (first hearlded in "The Political Unconscious") where he suggests that today's historical situation requires archaeologies of the future and not forecasts of the past--meaning, we must take as our political signposts a potentially different future, even if that means radically rethinking the present and seeing it as an archaic relic, instead of nostaligically clinging to the modernity project (a la Ulrich Bech or Jurgen Habermas). As such, Jameson pronounces Modernity, as a project, dead but simultaneously refuses to accept post-Modernity as the only choice, which for him would be accepting the cultural logic of late capitalism.
It is within this context that, through a rigorous examination of the form of a Utopian text (most notably: More's "Utopia"), Jameson envigorates Utopia and claims it has relevance for us today. Jameson's defense of Utopia can be seen as far back as his "Marxism and Form," while discussing Marcuse's Utopianism, Jameson affirms that Utopia--as a wild projection of a possible world--has more relevance than practical strategies. This is because Utopia relentlessly believes that an entirely new world is possible, not just piecemeal reformism.
The major thesis of this book is that Utopia's primary contribution is that it allows us to break, in thought, with the current order of things. By projecting a hypothetical future, Utopian texts allow us to think of our present as a contingent and changing time that can be broken and revamped.
The second half of the book amasses all of Jameson's writing on Utopia--minus the most recent essay "The Politics of Utopia," published in "New Left Review." I think they excluded this essay because the first half of the book basically is an extended version of the essay.
If you are someone invested in Utopian studies, then, you must read this book. If you are someone who things Utopia is simply a wishful fancy of a too ideal world to actually be lived, then, this book will give you another perspective to consider.
It is within this context that, through a rigorous examination of the form of a Utopian text (most notably: More's "Utopia"), Jameson envigorates Utopia and claims it has relevance for us today. Jameson's defense of Utopia can be seen as far back as his "Marxism and Form," while discussing Marcuse's Utopianism, Jameson affirms that Utopia--as a wild projection of a possible world--has more relevance than practical strategies. This is because Utopia relentlessly believes that an entirely new world is possible, not just piecemeal reformism.
The major thesis of this book is that Utopia's primary contribution is that it allows us to break, in thought, with the current order of things. By projecting a hypothetical future, Utopian texts allow us to think of our present as a contingent and changing time that can be broken and revamped.
The second half of the book amasses all of Jameson's writing on Utopia--minus the most recent essay "The Politics of Utopia," published in "New Left Review." I think they excluded this essay because the first half of the book basically is an extended version of the essay.
If you are someone invested in Utopian studies, then, you must read this book. If you are someone who things Utopia is simply a wishful fancy of a too ideal world to actually be lived, then, this book will give you another perspective to consider.