(Jameson, Frederic. Postmodernism, or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1991. Print.)
Pages
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Adolescence
(29)
Advertisement
(9)
Architecture
(21)
Art
(2)
Boredom
(5)
Car
(15)
Cheap Machines
(3)
Climate Control
(4)
Decentering
(15)
Discontinuity
(2)
Dishwasher
(1)
Easy Debt
(6)
Education
(5)
Film
(10)
Garage
(3)
Habit/Habitus
(2)
Historical Deafness
(4)
Home/Homeownership
(19)
Industrial Invasion
(9)
Inversions/Reversals
(12)
Kitchen
(6)
Liminal Space
(9)
Literature
(12)
Mall
(29)
Middleground
(14)
Myth
(29)
Networks
(2)
Nuclear Family
(8)
Partially Homogenized
(24)
Planning
(5)
Practice
(6)
Privatization
(11)
Project Focus
(19)
Race
(4)
Roads
(11)
Sci-Fi
(1)
Sex
(4)
Shallow Roots
(7)
Speed
(2)
Sprawl
(9)
Stuff
(12)
Suburban Ecology
(13)
Suburban Museum
(6)
Surface Tension
(5)
Technology
(6)
Television
(4)
The Aesthetics of Organization
(13)
The Agrarian
(17)
The Commuter
(10)
The Fragment
(3)
The Housewife
(22)
The Individual
(1)
The Temple of Domesticity
(12)
Values
(6)
Wasteland
(5)
Wilderness
(16)
Work/Home
(3)
Yard
(16)
"...even Heidegger continues to entertain a phantasmatic relationship with some organic precapitalist peasant landscape and village society, which is the final form of the image of Nature in our own time. Today, however, it may be possible to think all this in a different way, at the moment of a radical eclipse of Nature itself: Heidegger's 'field / path' is, after all, irredeemably and irrevocably destroyed by...the megalopolis, which runs its superhighways over the older fields and vacant lots and turns Heidegger's 'house of being' into condominiums...The other of our society is in that sense no longer Nature at all, as it was in precapitalist societies, but something else which we must now identify." (35)