Description

Book Synopsis

Our societies today are characterized by a universal algophobia: a generalized fear of pain. We strive to avoid all painful conditions – even the pain of love is treated as suspect. This algophobia extends into society: less and less space is given to conflicts and controversies that might prompt painful discussions. It takes hold of politics too: politics becomes a palliative politics that is incapable of implementing radical reforms that might be painful, so all we get is more of the same.

Faced with the coronavirus pandemic, the palliative society is transformed into a society of survival. The virus enters the palliative zone of well-being and turns it into a quarantine zone in which life is increasingly focused on survival. And the more life becomes survival, the greater the fear of death: the pandemic makes death, which we had carefully repressed and set aside, visible again. Everywhere, the prolongation of life at any cost is the preeminent value, and we are prepared to sacrifice everything that makes life worth living for the sake of survival.

This trenchant analysis of our contemporary societies by one of the most original cultural critics of our time will appeal to a wide readership.



Table of Contents
Algophobia

The Compulsion of Happiness

Survival

The Meaninglessness of Pain

The Cunning of Pain

Pain as Truth

The Poetics of Pain

The Dialectic of Pain

The Ontology of Pain

The Ethics of Pain

The Last Man

Notes

The Palliative Society: Pain Today

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RRP £45.00 – you save £4.50 (10%)

Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 22 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by Byung-Chul Han, Daniel Steuer

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of The Palliative Society: Pain Today by Byung-Chul Han

    Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
    Publication Date: 16/07/2021
    ISBN13: 9781509547234, 978-1509547234
    ISBN10: 1509547231

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Our societies today are characterized by a universal algophobia: a generalized fear of pain. We strive to avoid all painful conditions – even the pain of love is treated as suspect. This algophobia extends into society: less and less space is given to conflicts and controversies that might prompt painful discussions. It takes hold of politics too: politics becomes a palliative politics that is incapable of implementing radical reforms that might be painful, so all we get is more of the same.

    Faced with the coronavirus pandemic, the palliative society is transformed into a society of survival. The virus enters the palliative zone of well-being and turns it into a quarantine zone in which life is increasingly focused on survival. And the more life becomes survival, the greater the fear of death: the pandemic makes death, which we had carefully repressed and set aside, visible again. Everywhere, the prolongation of life at any cost is the preeminent value, and we are prepared to sacrifice everything that makes life worth living for the sake of survival.

    This trenchant analysis of our contemporary societies by one of the most original cultural critics of our time will appeal to a wide readership.



    Table of Contents
    Algophobia

    The Compulsion of Happiness

    Survival

    The Meaninglessness of Pain

    The Cunning of Pain

    Pain as Truth

    The Poetics of Pain

    The Dialectic of Pain

    The Ontology of Pain

    The Ethics of Pain

    The Last Man

    Notes

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