Ali Rattansi
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The whys and wherefores of the demise of postmodernism
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Mathewman and Hoey suggest that the notorious 'Sokal affair' may have played its part in discrediting postmodernism. The fact that many who had been attacked for their postmodernism had never embraced the term of course did little to help the postmodernist cause. Poststructuralism, one of postmodernism's components, especially the influence of Foucault, has certainly survived in a variety of academic guises. And the 'cultural' and 'linguistic' turns that were also central to postmodern theory, as well as the anti-essentialism and 'decentring of the subject' have now been more or less assimilated into mainstream academic theorising. So it cannot be said that postmodernism failed in any simple sense. But there seem to be no postmodernists left now, and, one might be forgiven for thinking, definitely not in the person of Zygmunt Bauman, who now prefers the positive concept of 'liquid modernity'.

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Bauman and contemporary sociology

A critical analysis

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