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                                                                             The global postmodern  203

                      and more difficult to find, as Pavarotti tops the charts, Gorecki outsells most of the acts
                      on Top of the Pops, and Premier League football is, in many instances, as expensive as,
                      say, ballet or opera.
                        Perhaps the most significant thing about postmodernism for the student of popular
                      culture  is  the  dawning  recognition  that  there  is  no  absolute  categorical  difference
                      between high and popular culture. This is not to say that one text or practice might not
                      be ‘better’ (for what / for whom, etc., must always be decided and made clear) than
                      another text or practice. But it is to say that there are no longer any easy reference
                      points, to which we can refer, and which will automatically preselect for us the good
                      from the bad. Some might regard such a situation (or even the description of such a
                      situation) with horror – the end of Standards. On the contrary, without easy recourse
                      to fixed categories of value, it calls for rigorous, if always contingent, standards, if our
                      task is to separate the good from the bad, the usable from the obsolete, the progressive
                      from the reactionary. As John Fekete (1987) points out,
                          By contrast [to modernism], postmodernism may be at last ready – or may, at least,
                          represent  the  transition  to  a  readiness  –  unneurotically,  to  get  on  without  the
                          Good-God-Gold Standards, one and all, indeed without any capitalised Standards,
                          while learning to be enriched by the whole inherited inventory once it is trans-
                          ferred to the lower case. . . . We need to believe and enact the belief that there are
                          better and worse ways to live the pluralism of value. To see all cows as the same
                          colour would truly amount to being lost in the night. But the prospect of learning
                          to be at ease with limited warranties, and with the responsibility for issuing them,
                          without the false security of inherited guarantees, is promising for a livelier, more
                          colourful, more alert, and, one hopes, more tolerant culture that draws enjoyment
                          from the dappled relations between meaning and value (17).

                      Fekete’s point is not significantly different from the argument made by Susan Sontag
                      (1966) at the birth of the postmodern ‘new sensibility’:

                          The new sensibility is defiantly pluralistic; it is dedicated both to an excruciating
                          seriousness and to fun and wit and nostalgia. It is also extremely history-conscious;
                          and the voracity of its enthusiasms (and of the supercession of these enthusiasms)
                          is very high-speed and hectic. From the vantage point of this new sensibility, the
                          beauty of a machine or of the solution to a mathematical problem, of a painting
                          by Jasper Johns, of a film by Jean-Luc Godard, and of the personalities and music
                          of the Beatles is equally accessible (304).






                        The global postmodern

                      One way in which the world is said to be becoming postmodern is in its increasing
                      globalization. Perhaps the dominant view of globalization, especially in discussions of
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