Good Entertainment. A Deconstruction of the Western Passion Narrative

Good Entertainment. A Deconstruction of the Western Passion Narrative

176 pages

Softcover

Genre: Philosophy, Nonfiction, Essay
Through Kant, Zen Buddhism, Heidegger, Kafka, and Rauschenberg, a history of entertainment

Entertainment today, in all its totalizing variety, has an apparently infinite capacity for incorporation: infotainment, edutainment, servotainment, confrontainment. Entertainment is held up as a new paradigm, even a new credo for being—and yet, in the West, it has had inescapably negative connotations. Han traces Western ideas of entertainment, considering, among other things, the scandal that arose from the first performance of Bach's Saint Matthew's Passion (deemed too beautiful, not serious enough); Kant's idea of morality as duty and the entertainment value of moralistic literature; Heidegger's idea of the thinker as a man of pain; Kafka's hunger artist and the art of negativity, which takes pleasure in annihilation; and Robert Rauschenberg's refusal of the transcendent. The history of the West, Han tells us, is a passion narrative, and passion appears as a killjoy. Achievement is the new formula for passion, and play is subordinated to production, gamified. And yet, he argues, at their core, passion and entertainment are not entirely different. The pure meaninglessness of entertainment is adjacent to the pure meaning of passion. The fool's smile resembles the pain-racked visage of Homo doloris. 

German title: Gute Unterhaltung - Eine Dekonstruktion der abendländischen Passionsgeschichte
ISBN: 978-3-95757-275-2
Publisher: Matthes & Seitz Berlin
Publication date: 2017
Series: Fröhliche Wissenschaft Vol. 129
Sold to: United Kingdom, Turkey, Portugal, France, China, Brazil, Italy, Spain, United States, South Korea

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Essay

Sample translation

English translation available