Everything about Fredric Jameson totally explained
Fredric Jameson (born
April 14,
1934) is an American
literary critic and
Marxist political theorist. He is best known for the analysis of contemporary
cultural trends—he once described
postmodernism as the
spatialization of culture under the pressure of organized
capitalism. Jameson's best-known books include
Postmodernism: The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism,
The Political Unconscious, and
Marxism and Form.
Jameson is currently William A. Lane Professor in
The Program in Literature and
Romance Studies at
Duke University.
Life and works
Jameson was born in
Cleveland,
Ohio. After graduating from
Haverford College in
1954, he briefly traveled to Europe, studying at
Aix-en-Provence,
Munich and
Berlin, where he learned of new developments in
continental philosophy, including the rise of
structuralism. He returned to America the following year to pursue a
doctoral degree at
Yale University, where he studied under
Erich Auerbach.
Early works
Erich Auerbach would prove to be a lasting influence on Jameson's thought. This was already apparent in the latter's
doctoral dissertation, which would be published in
1961 as
Sartre: the Origins of a Style. Auerbach's concerns were rooted in the German
philological tradition; his works on the history of
style analyzed literary form within
social history. Jameson would follow in these steps, examining the articulation of
poetry,
history,
philology, and
philosophy in the works of
Jean-Paul Sartre.
Jameson's work focused on the relation between the style of Sartre's writings and the political and ethical positions of his
existentialist philosophy. The occasional
Marxian aspects of Sartre's work were glossed over in this book; Jameson would return to them in the following decade.
Jameson's dissertation, though it drew on a long tradition of European cultural analysis, differed markedly from the prevailing trends of Anglo-American academia (which were
empiricism and
logical positivism in philosophy and
linguistics, and
New Critical formalism in
literary criticism). It nevertheless earned Jameson a position at
Harvard University, where he taught during the first half of the
1960s.
Research into Marxism
His interest in Sartre led Jameson to intense study of
Marxist literary theory. Even though
Karl Marx was becoming an important influence in American
social science, partly through the influence of the many European intellectuals who had sought refuge from the
Second World War in the U.S., such as
Theodor Adorno, the literary and critical work of the
Western Marxists were still largely unknown in American academia in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Jameson's shift toward Marxism was also driven by his increasing political connection with the
New Left and
pacifist movements. His research focused on thinkers such as
Kenneth Burke,
Gyorgy Lukács,
Ernst Bloch,
Theodor Adorno,
Walter Benjamin,
Herbert Marcuse,
Louis Althusser, and Sartre, who viewed cultural
criticism as an integral feature of Marxist theory. This position represented a break with more
orthodox Marxism-Leninism, which held a narrow view of
historical materialism. In some ways Jameson has been concerned, along with other Marxist cultural critics such as
Terry Eagleton, to articulate Marxism's relevance in respect to current philosophical and literary trends.
While the
vulgar Marxist view of
ideology held that the cultural "
superstructure" was completely
determined by the
economic "base", the Western Marxists critically analyzed culture as a historical and social phenomenon alongside economic production and distribution or political power relationships. They held that culture must be studied using the
Hegelian concept of
immanent critique: the theory that adequate description and criticism of a philosophical or cultural text must be carried out in the same terms that text itself employs, in order to develop its internal inconsistencies in a manner that allows intellectual advancement. Marx highlighted immanent critique in his early writings, derived from Hegel's development of a new form of dialectic thinking that would, as Jameson comments, 'pull itself up by its bootstraps.'
Analysis of structuralism
At the same time, Jameson studied the main current alternative to Marxist analysis, as it was taking shape in Europe: the
structuralist theory of language and literature. After moving to the
University of California, San Diego in
1967, Jameson published
Marxism and Form: Twentieth-Century Dialectical Theories of Literature (
1971) and
The Prison-House of Language: A Critical Account of Structuralism and Russian Formalism (
1972).
Both these books attempted to engage with features of mainstream literary and academic life that Jameson perceived as tending toward detachment from reality. He criticized both the enshrining of the work of art as an object completely separate from the context of its production through the
humanist praise of the artist and the anti-historical
formalism derived from a restrictive interpretation of structuralist method. Jameson saw both trends as failures to perceive the key elements of the contemporary production and consumption of artistic objects. Jameson also held, as in previous works, that cultural objects must be understood according to cultural rules; he argued that careful and detailed analysis of cultural practices would reveal art and culture to be grounded in economic realities.
Jameson's work during the 1970s continued in this direction. It combined a multi-layered appraisal of literary texts, including
genres and contemporary authors who were scarcely treated by academic studies, ranging from
science fiction to
Raymond Chandler, with theoretical discussions of
ideology,
modernism and
literary history.
Narrative and history
History came to play an increasingly central role in Jameson's interpretation of both the reading (consumption) and writing (production) of literary texts. Jameson marked his full-fledged commitment to Hegelian-Marxist philosophy with the publication of
The Political Unconscious: Narrative as a Socially Symbolic Act, the opening slogan of which is "always historicize" (
1981).
The Political Unconscious takes its object not as the literary text itself, but rather the interpretive frameworks by which they're now constructed. It emerges as a manifesto for new activity concerning literary narrative.
The book's argument emphasizes history as the 'ultimate horizon' of literary and cultural analysis. It borrowed notions from the structuralist tradition and from
Raymond Williams's work in
cultural studies, and joined them to a largely Marxist view of
labor (whether blue-collar or intellectual) as the focal point of analysis. Jameson's readings exploited both the explicit formal and thematic choices of the writer and the unconscious framework guiding these. Artistic choices that were ordinarily viewed in purely
aesthetic terms were recast in terms of historical literary practices and norms, in an attempt to develop a systematic inventory of the constraints they imposed on the artist as an individual creative subject. To further this metacommentary, he described the
ideologeme, or "the smallest intelligible unit of the essentially antagonistic collective discourses of social classes."
Jameson's establishment of history as the only pertinent factor in this analysis, which derived the categories governing artistic production from their historical framework, was paired with a bold theoretical claim. Jameson's book claimed to establish Marxian literary criticism, centered in the notion of an artistic
mode of production, as the most all-inclusive and comprehensive theoretical framework for understanding literature. The groundwork laid out in this book would serve as a basis for another of Jameson's best-known works.
The critique of postmodernism
"Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism" was initially published in the journal
New Left Review in
1984, during Jameson's tenure as Professor of Literature and
History of Consciousness at the
University of California, Santa Cruz. This controversial article, which would later be expanded to a full-sized book, was part of a series of analyses of
postmodernism from the dialectical point of view Jameson had developed in his earlier work on narrative. Jameson here viewed the postmodern "skepticism towards
metanarratives" as a "mode of experience" stemming from the conditions of intellectual labor imposed by the
late capitalist mode of production.
Postmodernists claimed that the complex differentiation between "spheres" or fields of life (such as the political, the social, the cultural, the commercial, etc.) and between distinct
classes and
rôles within each field, had been overcome by the
crisis of foundationalism and the consequent relativization of truth-claims. Jameson argued, against this, that these phenomena had or could have been understood successfully within a modernist framework; postmodern failure to achieve this understanding implied an abrupt break in the dialectical refinement of thought.
In his view, postmodernity's merging of all discourse into an undifferentiated whole was the result of the colonization of the cultural sphere, which had retained at least partial autonomy during the prior modernist era, by a newly organized corporate capitalism. Following
Adorno and
Horkheimer's analysis of the
culture industry, Jameson discussed this phenomenon in his critical discussion of
architecture,
film, narrative and
visual arts, as well as in his strictly philosophical work. Two of Jameson's best-known claims from
Postmodernism are that postmodernity is characterized by
pastiche and a crisis in
historicity. Jameson argued that parody (which requires a moral judgment or comparison with societal norms) was replaced by pastiche (collage and other forms of juxtaposition without a normative grounding). Relatedly, Jameson argued that the postmodern era suffers from a crisis in historicity: "there no longer does seem to be any organic relationship between the American history we learn from schoolbooks and the lived experience of the current, multinational, high-rise, stagflated city of the newspapers and of our own everyday life" (22).
Jameson's analysis of postmodernism attempted to view it as historically grounded; he therefore explicitly rejected any moralistic opposition to postmodernity as a cultural phenomenon, and continued to insist upon a Hegelian immanent critique. His failure to dismiss postmodernism from the onset, however, was perceived by many as an implicit endorsement of postmodern views.
Recent work
Jameson's later work has dispelled the perception that he's sympathetic to postmodern thought. He turned to Adorno again in search of a contemporary theoretical framework for Marxian dialectics. He supplemented his critique of postmodernism with additional material, appearing first in a casebook compiled by
Douglas Kellner in 1989 under the title
Postmodernism/Jameson, Critique and then in the extended version of the 1984 article, published in book form as
Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism in 1991 (see also reference to
Ernest Mandel). This book earned him the
Modern Language Association's
Lowell Award.
During the 1990s Jameson further developed this line of thought in the
1994 Seeds of Time, in his Wellek Library lectures at the University of California, and in the 1998
Brecht and Method. This last was an analysis of the political and social context surrounding
Brecht's political commitment.
Jameson's most recent work includes
Archaeologies of the Future, a study of
utopia and
science fiction, launched at the Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, in December 2005;
The Modernist Papers (2007), a collection of essays on
modernism; and
Valences of the Dialectic (forthcoming), which will include Jameson's critical responses to
Slavoj Zizek,
Gilles Deleuze, and others. A recent overview of Jameson's work,
Fredric Jameson: Live Theory, by Ian Buchanan, was published in 2007.
Bibliography
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Jameson on Jameson: Conversations on Cultural Marxism Dureham, NC: Duke University Press 2007''
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