
Disconsolate Dreamers
On Pessimism and Utopia
Evelyn Elsaesser(Author)
John Hunt Publishing
Published on 30. June 2023
Book
Paperback/Softback
80 pages
978-1-80341-326-6 (ISBN)
Description
Our world is increasingly sceptical of happy endings. Notions of resistance or alternatives - of hope - seem evermore ill-fated as we resign to a slow and painful descent further into capitalism. However, from a critical position, one that does not shy away from the scale of the horror facing us, we can begin to rethink utopianism, and plot new and speculative pathways for collective escape. Through quiet acts of naysaying to the world, of nihilistic or self-destructive events, or in wider-ranging renegotiations of what's acceptable and possible at the limits of reason, pessimism revives the possibility for radical change. It calls for a disentanglement from the world and, in so doing, offers a glimpse at the utopian impossible. Against the pernicious machinations of modern-day capitalism and a perverse optimism that sustains it, Disconsolate Dreamers explores the extent to which pessimism is compatible with a radical utopian goal - namely, a collective escape from the misery of modern existence. It shows that, in a thoroughly hopeless world devoid of rational alternatives, it is time for the Left to consider the pessimist a helpful guide out of the somnolence of capitalist realism, revealing how pessimism necessitates a radical revision of utopian alterity.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Collective Ink
Dimensions
Height: 214 mm
Width: 143 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
109 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-80341-326-6 (9781803413266)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
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E-Book
06/2023
Zero Books
€7.90
Available for download
Person
Rachid M'Rabty is a writer and researcher from Manchester, UK. Rachid studied modern and contemporary literature at Leeds Beckett University before completing a PhD at Manchester Metropolitan University. His previous writing has focused on violence, nihilism, horror and the Gothic, as well as Marxist and Post-Marxist critical theory in contemporary literature, TV and film. When not writing, Rachid works in higher education.