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KNOWLEDGE
IS PRODUCED
TO BE SOLD
JEAN-FRANCOIS LYOTARD (1924–1998)
IN CONTEXT
BRANCH
Epistemology
APPROACH
Postmodernism
BEFORE
1870s The term “postmodern”
is first used in the context of
art criticism.
1939–45 Technological
advances in World War II lay
the ground for the computer
revolution of the 20th century.
1953 Ludwig Wittgenstein
writes in his Philosophical
Investigations about “language
games”—an idea that Lyotard
uses to develop his idea of
meta-narratives.
AFTER
1984 American literary critic
Fredric Jameson writes
Postmodernism, or the Cultural
Logic of Late Capitalism.
From 1990s The World Wide
Web offers unprecedented
access to information.
T
he idea that knowledge
is produced to be sold
appears in Jean-François
Lyotard’s book The Postmodern
Condition: A Report on Knowledge.
The book was originally written
for the Council of Universities in
Quebec, Canada, and the use of
the term “postmodern” in its title
is significant. Although Lyotard
did not invent the term, which had
been used by various art critics
since the 1870s, his book was
responsible for broadening its range
and increasing its popularity. His
use of the word in the title of this
book is often said to mark the
beginning of postmodern thought.
The term “postmodernism”
has since been used in so many
different ways that it is now hard
to know exactly what it means,
Knowledge is
produced to be sold.
Computer technology has
changed knowledge into
information that is...
...stored in vast
databases.
This information is judged
by its commercial value,
not by its truth.
...owned by large
corporations.