Gene Edward Veith
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Postmodern Times: Book Review

Postmodern Times by Gene Edward Veith, 1994

This is an important book that demystifies Postmodernism. The book is thirty years old but still accurate for today’s world. When the book was written, the postmodernist project was a small seedling which made it hard to see all the parts. Today, the postmodernist project has grown up into a forest and all the parts are clearly visible right in front of us. This book is like a user’s manual for the world we live in today.

Here are three key reasons this book is important to read.

First, this book offers helpful definitions on many of the key terms that are around us all the time: postmodernism, social construct, queer theory, and intertextuality. 

Here are some of the most important terms and definitions from the book. 

Objectivist: those who believe that truth is objective and can be known (pg. 47)

Constructivist: those who believe that human beings make up their own realities (pg. 47)

Queer Theory: culture as suppression of homosexuals (pg. 53)

Intertextuality: culture is texts interacting with other texts (pg. 52)

Deconstruction: dismantle the paradigms of the past and bring the marginal to the center (pg. 57)

Social Construct: these paradigms are useful fictions, a matter of “telling stories” (pg. 57)

The second reason this book is important is that it clearly shows how the postmodernist project is ultimately aimed at destroying the individual self. That can seem like a strange claim to make given that our culture is so obsessed with identity. Let me explain.

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