SamSuka
Aufhebunga Bunga
Aufhebunga Bunga

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/341/ How to Grow a Backbone (II), ft. Russell Jacoby

On whether the individual is becoming weaker.

[Patreon Exclusive]

We continue the interview by asking intellectual historian and critic Russell Jacoby what is behind the apparent flattening of the individual, and whether Western society is no longer creating subjects adequate to democracy. Is Jacoby being overly conservative in mounting a retreat to the 19th century individual?

We discuss consumerism and homogenisation, and the role that 'public opinion' plays – both more fragmented than ever, and yet ever-present.

In the After Party, the Bunga boys discuss three key issues:

Selected books by Jacoby:

Other recent articles and interviews:

/341/ How to Grow a Backbone (II), ft. Russell Jacoby

Comments

There are formal aspects I didn't think were that great, but that's rather by-the-by; the point I was making is that it depicts a different post-apocalyptic scenario to the one we've become used to in the past decades. Namely, a hopeful, cooperative vision of humanity lifting itself back up. -Alex

Aufhebunga Bunga

On the issue of individuality. I think we don't have less (or more) individuality. There is a change in the perception that there is individuality but that is what we are being told by the media, public intellectuals and our leaders. My experience doesn’t support this. When I talk to people I am constantly amazed with the diversity of views despite all my circle having more or less the same cultural reference points. The world is so vast and there are so many niches that this individual diversity lives on. What, I think what changed is the ability to assess this. In the past it was easy because it was superficially visible - you just went to a foreign country and everything was visibly different. But this 19th century reading of individuality was just an extension of the colonial world clashing with its dependencies. This old instrument to identify individuals’ individuality are just not fit for purpose today. They are too blunt and crude. Contrary to what Phil concludes, individuality hasn't been hollowed out in the last 150 years, it just remains the same but harder to measure. If individuality is really a thing, then the solution is to develop tools that can capture it rather than assume it has gone because we can’t see it. Miguel

Knoroz

Station eleven is the epitome of what your friends from performance anxiety talked about in one of your episodes. A boring reiteration of the compulsion to flashbacks and backstories, meshed with a morbid insistence on trite US literary tropes and on intersectional bs.

Andrea


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