From: joedees@bellsouth.net
Date: Wed Jul 24 2002 - 18:11:57 MDT
A futile defence of postmodernism
Andy Lamey 
National Post 
Tuesday, July 23, 2002
Stanley Fish is one of the most well-known gadflies in American 
academia. He once claimed that the postmodern literary theory he 
subscribed to "relieves me of the obligation to be right ... and 
demands 
only that I be interesting." Fish later retracted that statement, but 
he's remained a pugnacious advocate of postmodernism. In the 
famous 
Sokal Hoax, physicist Alan Sokal published a paper "liberally 
salted 
with nonsense" (e.g. "physical reality ... is at bottom a social and 
linguistic construct") in a postmodernist academic journal. Fish, 
executive director of the university press that published the 
journal, 
publicly blasted Sokal for his "bad joke."
Now Fish is involved in another contretemps. In the current 
Harper's, he 
attacks journalists who criticized postmodernism following 
September 11. 
Writing in The New York Times on Sept. 22, Edward Rothstein 
lamented 
that "postmodernists challenge assertions that truth and ethical 
judgment have any objective validity." Surely the terrorist attacks 
were 
indisputably wrong and show the poverty of such relativism, 
Rothstein 
and others argued. Fish has responded with a scorching polemic, 
prompting rejoinders in the Times and The New Republic.
According to Fish, postmodernists don't claim there are "no 
universal 
values or no truths independent of particular perspectives." On the 
contrary. "When I offer a reading of a poem or pronounce on a 
case in 
First Amendment law," Fish writes, "I regard my reading as true -- 
not 
provisionally true, or true for my reference group only, but true." 
All 
a postmodernist says is that "I may very well be unable to 
persuade 
others, no less educated or credentialed than I, of the truth so 
perspicuous to me." Postmodernists don't deny the possibility of 
objective truth, Fish argues, merely that everyone will recognize 
it.
If that's true, postmodernism's problem isn't relativism, but 
banality. 
Who has ever claimed people always recognize the truth? By 
Fish's 
standard, practically everyone is a postmodernist. But his 
characterization of postmodernism is wildly misleading. 
Postmodernism 
attracts controversy because its advocates do deny the possibility 
of 
truth and objectivity. When Fish's essay is read alongside what 
postmodernists have actually said, his defence seems more like an 
admission that postmodernism's critics have been right all along.
What bothers many critics is how postmodernism defies 
elementary logic. 
Consider the statement "Everything is subjective." This idea is 
nonsensical, anti-postmodernist Thomas Nagel has written, "for it 
would 
itself have to be either subjective or objective. But it can't be 
objective, since in that case it would be false if true. And it can't 
be 
subjective, because then it would not rule out any objective claim, 
including the claim that it is objectively false."
Nagel's criticism is an example of what philosophers call the tu 
quoque 
argument (Latin for "you too"). According to it, subjectivism 
inevitably 
appeals to the thing it purports to deny -- inevitably contradicts 
itself. This criticism appears frequently in debates around 
postmodernism. Indeed, one way to view the history of 
postmodern 
arguments is as a series of attempts to evade the force of the "you 
too" 
objection, by devising ever more complicated ways of saying 
"everything 
is subjective," in the hope that some such formulation can unleash 
the 
genie of subjectivism in a non-contradictory way.
Postmodernist Paul de Man, for example, believed literary theory 
should 
uphold "a radical relativism": No interpretation of a text is better 
than another, because language is inherently unstable. He 
conceptualized 
his approach in a sentence that used "sign" to refer to language: 
"Sign 
and meaning can never coincide." But de Man's theory breaks 
down when 
applied to his own words. They are themselves signs, used to 
mean 
something. To communicate his method, he has to draw on the 
property of 
language he denies it as having.
Similarly, Stanford professor Richard Rorty offers a version of 
postmodernism which, "drops the notion of truth as 
correspondence with 
reality altogether." To Rorty, the idea that language captures 
objective 
truth represents an "impossible attempt to step outside our skins -- 
the 
traditions, linguistic and other, within which we do our thinking 
and 
self-criticism." Claims about what is true are inevitably parochial 
and 
relative. But Rorty's statement that "it's impossible to step outside 
our skins" is itself intended to correspond with reality: Rorty 
offers 
it as a fact about all people. But by doing so, he uses language to 
capture something he takes to be true -- in order to show that 
language 
can never capture anything true.
Such tu quoque arguments have been invoked against 
postmodernist ideas 
countless times. Yet rather than rebut such criticisms, Fish 
concedes 
their force. He writes that anyone who disputes the idea of 
objective 
truth is "silly." It's as though Fish realizes nothing can rescue 
postmodernism from itself, so he denies that postmodernists say 
what 
they say. When his defence is through, all that's left of 
postmodernism 
is its name. With friends like this, postmodernism needs no 
enemies.
© Copyright 2002 National Post 
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