<p>“Byung-Chul Han's new book challenges the reader to go far beyond the worn-out critique of neoliberalism. On the one side, there is the progressive replacement of substance through communication, painted as a road to existential perdition; it contrasts, on the other side, with the utopian view of a return towards the security of rituals in their form and appearance. This reversal of long-established thought is expressed in a compressed and energetic language that reads like a manifesto.”<br /><b>Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Stanford University<br /></b></p> <p>“The kind of book … that leads one to rethink our standard narratives of history and to see our society and era in a fresh light.” <br /><b>Steven Mintz, <i>Inside Higher Ed<br /></i></b><br />“an essential philosopher for anyone wanting to diagnose what plagues the modern person”<br /><b><i>The Gospel Coalition</i></b></p>
Avoiding saccharine nostalgia for the rituals of the past, Han provides a genealogy of their disappearance as a means of diagnosing the pathologies of the present. He juxtaposes a community without communication – where the intensity of togetherness in silent recognition provides structure and meaning – to today’s communication without community, which does away with collective feelings and leaves individuals exposed to exploitation and manipulation by neoliberal psycho-politics. The community that is invoked everywhere today is an atrophied and commoditized community that lacks the symbolic power to bind people together. For Han, it is only the mutual praxis of recognition borne by the ritualistic sharing of the symbolic between members of a community which creates the footholds of objectivity allowing us to make sense of time.
This new book by one of the most creative cultural theorists writing today will be of interest to a wide readership.
1. The Compulsion of Production 1
2. The Compulsion of Authenticity 16
3. Rituals of Closure 27
4. Festivals and Religion 36
5. A Game of Life and Death 47
6. The End of History 56
7 The Empire of Signs 60
8. From Duelling to Drone Wars 69
9. From Myth to Dataism 76
10. From Seduction to Porn 84
Notes 90
Bibliography 99