The Agony of Eros - Byung-Chul Han

The Agony of Eros

By Byung-Chul Han

  • Release Date: 2017-03-31
  • Genre: Philosophy
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 16 Ratings

Description

An argument that love requires the courage to accept self-negation for the sake of discovering the Other.
Byung-Chul Han is one of the most widely read philosophers in Europe today, a member of the new generation of German thinkers that includes Markus Gabriel and Armen Avanessian. In The Agony of Eros, a bestseller in Germany, Han considers the threat to love and desire in today's society. For Han, love requires the courage to accept self-negation for the sake of discovering the Other. In a world of fetishized individualism and technologically mediated social interaction, it is the Other that is eradicated, not the self. In today's increasingly narcissistic society, we have come to look for love and desire within the “inferno of the same.”

Han offers a survey of the threats to Eros, drawing on a wide range of sources—Lars von Trier's film Melancholia, Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, Fifty Shades of Grey, Michel Foucault (providing a scathing critique of Foucault's valorization of power), Martin Buber, Hegel, Baudrillard, Flaubert, Barthes, Plato, and others. Han considers the “pornographication” of society, and shows how pornography profanes eros; addresses capitalism's leveling of essential differences; and discusses the politics of eros in today's “burnout society.” To be dead to love, Han argues, is to be dead to thought itself.

Concise in its expression but unsparing in its insight, The Agony of Eros is an important and provocative entry in Han's ongoing analysis of contemporary society.

This remarkable essay, an intellectual experience of the first order, affords one of the best ways to gain full awareness of and join in one of the most pressing struggles of the day: the defense, that is to say—as Rimbaud desired it—the “reinvention” of love.
—from the foreword by Alain Badiou

Reviews

  • Accessible for most college level readers

    5
    By rawestramen
    Engaging topic for this amateur philosophy reader. Puts a new slant on how the current cultural shifts are affecting more abstract concepts and experiences such as love, sexuality, desire. I came to this after hearing of the author on a podcast (Philosophize This!). His ideas about how increasing information (mostly online) is ‘enslaving’ us by making us think we’re increasing our freedom by working hard and constantly ego-comparing was thought provoking to say the least. Certainly struck a chord with this recovering social-media-‘aholic. I may be butchering the ideas but nonetheless it’s nice to hear professional philosophical thought on current problems being filtered into digestible concepts for the rest of us (and not just other academicians).