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186 Chapter 9 Postmodernism
contemporary world’ (41). Lyotard’s ‘diagnosis of the postmodern condition is, in one
sense, the diagnosis of the final futility of the intellectual’ (ibid.). Lyotard is himself
aware of what he calls the contemporary intellectual’s ‘negative heroism’. Intellectuals
have, he argues, been losing their authority since ‘the violence and critique mounted
against the academy during the sixties’ (quoted in Connor, 1989: 41). As Iain
Chambers (1988) observes,
the debate over postmodernism can . . . be read as the symptom of the disruptive
ingression of popular culture, its aesthetics and intimate possibilities, into a previ-
ously privileged domain. Theory and academic discourses are confronted by the
wider, unsystemized, popular networks of cultural production and knowledge. The
intellectual’s privilege to explain and distribute knowledge is threatened; his
authority, for it is invariably ‘his’, redimensionalized. This in part explains both the
recent defensiveness of the modernist, particularly Marxist, project, and the cold
nihilism of certain notorious strands in postmodernism (216).
Angela McRobbie (1994) claims that postmodernism has enfranchised a new body
of intellectuals: ‘the coming into being of those whose voices were historically
drowned out by the (modernist) metanarratives of mastery, which were in turn both
patriarchal and imperialist’ (15). Moreover, as Kobena Mercer (1994) points out,
While the loudest voices in the culture announced nothing less than the end of
everything of any value, the emerging voices, practices and identities of dispersed
African, Caribbean and Asian peoples crept in from the margins of postimperial
Britain to dislocate commonplace certainties and consensual ‘truths’ and thus
open up new ways of seeing, and understanding, the peculiarities of living in the
twilight of an historic interregnum in which ‘the old is dying and the new cannot
be born’ [Gramsci,1971] (Mercer, 1994: 2).
Jean Baudrillard
Jean Baudrillard, according to Best and Kellner (1991), ‘has achieved guru status
throughout the English speaking world’ (109). They claim that ‘Baudrillard has
emerged as one of the most high profile postmodern theorists’ (111). His presence has
not been confined to the world of academia; articles and interviews have appeared in
many popular magazines.
Baudrillard claims that we have reached a stage in social and economic development
in which ‘it is no longer possible to separate the economic or productive realm from
the realms of ideology or culture, since cultural artefacts, images, representations, even
feelings and psychic structures have become part of the world of the economic’
(Connor, 1989: 51). This is partly explained, Baudrillard argues, by the fact that there