The Dictionary of Human Geography

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Dreamscapes of Privatopia and the Carceral
City’s Mean Streets. As Smith (1996b) was to
make clear within the context of gentrification
more generally, the new spaces of the
‘revanchist’ city were not simply drawn by
capital, but were forged out of an unholy
alliance between it and the state. Looking back
on these dreary accounts of postmodern
urbanism, it is hard to remember the demo-
cratically minded intentions of one of its most
influential progenitors – Robert Venturi – who
reacted against the sparseness of orthodox
modernism by collapsing the distinction
between high and low architecture in his fam-
ous book,Learning from Las Vegas(Venturi,
Scott Brown and Izenor, 1972).
Postmodernism elicited several different
responses inhuman geography. As the fore-
going suggests, many of the first responses
were influenced by postmodernism in archi-
tecture and planning (rather than literature or
the creative arts more generally). Some saw in
postmodernism’s attention to difference and
specificity an opportunity to revive and re-
fashionhumanistic geographyas a form of
irredeemably critical and affirmative local
knowledge(e.g. Ley, 1987, 1993, 2003a),
while others saw an opportunity for a far more
theoretically ambitious, insistently radical
reconstruction of human geography writ large
(Dear, 1986, 1988; Dear and Flusty, 2002).
Many of these discussions were inspired in
some measure by experiments in urbanism
on the west coast of North America, notably
Los Angeles and Vancouver, and they fostered
the emergence and identification of a los
angeles school. One of its principal protag-
onists was Edward Soja, who straddled the

fields of geographyand planning. Unlike
Ley and Dear, however, he had a much more
positive view ofhistorical materialismand
of the (crucial) possibility of its spatialized
reconstruction through a critical engagement
with postmodernism (see Soja, 1989). Against
this, however, as noted above, Harvey (1989b)
mobilized his own historico-geographical
materialism as a vigorous critique of

postmodernism and postmodernity. These
more architectonic versions of postmodernism
as critical project (Soja) and critical object
(Harvey) were roundly criticized byfeminist
geographers in particular for their insensitivity
to difference. These critiques were part of a
growing interest in post-colonialism and
post-structuralism that soon eclipsed post-
modernism in human geography and beyond.
Today, the hullabaloo over postmodernism
has waned, but it manages to live on in some
contexts, including not only architecture
but also, strangely enough, religion. Part
philosophical engagement inspired by post-
structuralists such as Jacques Derrida (see
Caputo, 1997; Caputo and Scanlon, 1999),
and part a cultural wave of new Age, Eastern
mysticism, this latest reconfiguration of post-
modernism is paired against a disbelieving
modernism, elements of which (see table) have
been deployed in epic battles against religion.
How the religion–postmodernism nexus will
evolve remains to be seen, but one thing is
certain: whether we are in a state ofmodern-
ityor postmodernity, it will not take long for
contemporary culture to construct nostalgia
forpostmodernism, making pastiche out of it
as it did to everything else, serving up ironic
quotations of the movement that gave new
meaning to the term ‘irony’. kwo/jpj

Suggested reading
Dear and Flusty (1998); Harvey (1989b);
Jameson (1991); Ley (2003a); Soja (1989).

postmodernity Not to be confused with the
cultural and aesthetic movement postmod-
ernism, postmodernity refers to the contem-
porary historical period that arguably closed
the door uponmodernity. The advent of the
historical era and its associated artistic move-
ment occurred during roughly the same
period (the mid-to-late twentieth century),
but the driving forces of postmodernity oper-
ate at a longer time-scale than do those of
postmodernism (particularly now that the cul-
tural form is into its dotage). While modernity
was characterized by an insistence upon the
possibility and knowability of ‘Truth’, post-
modernity replaced itsfoundationalassump-
tions of solvability in scientific enterprises (see
science), universality in ethical imperatives
(seeethics) and transcendence in the essence
of things (seeontology) with uncertainty,
singularity and immanence. For better or
worse (and it has certainly been both), the
defining elements of postmodernity arose
from a series of major transformations in the

Modernism Postmodernism
Compartmentalism Holism
Individualism Communalism
Rationalism Spiritualism
Nationalism Globalism
Imperatives Tolerance

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_P Final Proof page 568 1.4.2009 3:20pm

POSTMODERNITY
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