Thursday, 19 November 2015

Postmodernism case study

Postmodernism is essentially not a philosophy, it is a way of analysing things; it is a critic of what we assume is real. He says that postmodernism argues that there is no truth and that the whole thing we watch and hear is social constructed. Social construction includes genders, power and class which means that they are real and fixed however postmodernism argues back that none of these are “absolute” truth and it is something we have all created as a society and now we believe that these are the truth. Postmodernism wants to break down the idea of Good + Evil and the binary of Male + Female through the typical conventions of postmodern texts and these are: parodies, pastiches, intertextual, bricolage, hyperreality, virtual reality, simulacra and alterity within the media.

My chosen music video by Robin Thicke is a summer hit - ‘Blurred Lines’ (feat. T.I. and Pharrell) which has been evoked many parodies within the media, particularly through the popular e-media platform, YouTube.

The American musical show ’Glee’ has taken over the hit whilst keeping it very similar to the original yet showing intertextuality, this being a type of respect however it is used to fit in with the show’s narrative. Similarly, YouTube have videos of countless covers of the song ‘Blurred Lines’ such as acoustic covers, country covers and even beat boxing covers; these focus primarily on the music rather than the hype surrounding the video, showing pastiche by doing something different but by still using the element  from the song.

However, there is major controversy surrounding the lyrics of ’Blurred Lines’ which some audiences interpret as being suggestive of drug abuse and assault, as well as the body shots. In the video being heavily voyeuristic of the female models wearing very little clothing in order to attract the male gaze - this is called Hegemonic Norms. The video itself has an alternative video in which the roles are reserved, so the men are wearing little clothing instead. One parody uses the pun #TANLINES in comparison to the iconic red text in the official video (e.g. #BLURREDLINES and #THICKE), where females are worshipping tanned males in juxtaposition to the official video. Whilst this doesn’t seem very serious, some audiences were unimpressed by the female’s representation in the music video.


Another music video named ‘Defined Lines’ (feminist version) has used binary opposite where the females are wearing formal clothes whilst the men are dancing around them.