Identity Crises: A Social Critique of Postmodernity

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U of Minnesota Press, 1998 - Social Science - 291 pages
A readable analysis of postmodernity that provides a cultural context for its rise.

Though the term "postmodern" looms large on our cultural landscape, rarely do we find a systematic and impartial discussion of the circumstances of its ascendance. Identity Crises offers just such an accounting. In this book, Robert G. Dunn situates the intellectual currency of "the postmodern" within the larger context of social and cultural change shaping the movement over the past several decades. Along the way, he offers a necessary corrective to both the sociological and historical shortcomings of cultural criticism and the cultural myopia of social science in considering the postmodern world.

Dunn explains contemporary culture and contemporary cultural criticism as part of a distinct historical moment, one that entails new social relations as a consequence of new means of production. In place of prevailing cultural and political constructions, Dunn proposes a "social relational" approach that explicitly recognizes the structural and situational contexts of identity formation. He conceptualizes issues of identity and difference in terms of social, cultural, and political transformations in the transition from modern to postmodern society.

This provides a socio-historical perspective through which to consider the impact of consumption, mass media, globalization, and new social movements on identity-forming processes.

Unique to this undertaking and crucial to Dunn's critique of poststructuralist and postmodern theories is his application of the theory of George Herbert Mead as a more effective means of theorizing identity and difference. Dunn's focus on postmodernity as opposed topostmodernism serves to ground the analysis of identity and difference materially and socially.

Learned, evenhanded, and enlightening, Identity Crises is an essential demonstration of the connections between cultural theory and criticism, contemporary culture, and sociological analysis.

 

Contents

Modernity and Postmodernity Transformations in Identity
51
On the Transition from Modernity to Postmodernity
81
Explaining the Destabilization of Identity Postmodernization
107
Identity Politics and the Dual Logic of Postmodernity
143
Redeeming the Subject Poststructuralism Meadian Social
175
Conclusion Postmodernity and Its Theoretical
221
Notes
231
Bibliography
259
Index
281
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About the author (1998)

Robert G. Dunn is professor of sociology at California State University.

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