#+title: Reconstructing Postmodernism #+author: Preston Pan #+description: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+html_head: #+language: en #+OPTIONS: broken-links:t * Introduction In the collective subconscious there is this idea of the "norm" -- a set of expected cultural attitudes and beliefs that other people hold in any given society. This idea is used to analyze hierarchical structures found in society, manifest in concepts like the patriarchy, queer rights, black liberation, and others. There are many frameworks that include all of the above as subframeworks and synthesize them in some way, but often they have a couple ideas in common: that the concepts that implicitly infect our society in some way via some hierarchical order are often unjustified and could be dissolved without much loss. I propose the following: that the conclusions presented (that often social hierarchies are unjustified) are true /in some sense/, but that the real story is more complicated. I posit that our inability to solve the problem of society and our treatment of minorities isn't a /problem of society/, but rather a framing problem. * The Bleak Culture Our current society is broken. This is a view shared by a vast majority of people, but many people hold this exact view for a multitude of reasons. I hold this view because I believe that no current cultural narrative solves the problem of our "current generation". The progressive narrative posits that our problems in society are highly linked with our inability to cope with social inequalities, often treating minorities and, often times, regular people poorly in favor of those with high status. The conservative answer to culture is that we must turn back, back to something that has been shown to work in the past.