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What's Left of Philosophy
What's Left of Philosophy

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101 | Free Time Under Capitalism

In this episode, we discuss Theodor Adorno’s essay “Free Time”, in which the critical theorist really lets his cantankerous old man flag fly. He argues that how our subjectivities are shaped by capitalist culture and work discipline makes it very difficult—maybe even impossible—to use our time off the clock in genuinely meaningful ways. Certainly we waste a lot of our precious hours consuming pointless, artless slop and participating in activities just because we feel like we’re supposed to, but is it really the case that everything we do is just unfree pseudo-activity, at best blowing off steam before helplessly getting back to work? We broadly come down on the side of low culture and hobbies, but Marvel movies and Disney adults are definitely cause for concern.

References:

Theodor Adorno, “Free Time”, trans. Gordon Finlayson and Nicholas Walker, in The Culture Industry: Selected Essays on Mass Culture, ed. J.M. Bernstein (New York: Routledge, 2001).

leftofphilosophy.com | @leftofphil

music:

“Vintage Memories” by Schematist | schematist.bandcamp.com

“My Space” by Overu | https://get.slip.stream/KqmvAN

101 | Free Time Under Capitalism 101 | Free Time Under Capitalism

Comments

Honestly I like Adorno quite a bit, for lots of reasons, just I started my first ever degree at the age of 38 and my urge to speedrun undergrad drove me to avoid anything that was gonna send me spiralling. Or at least, spiralling any more than does the genuinely deranged decision to take out a student loan in middle age.

benabu

Illmatic was the first album I ever bought, and I always wondered what white Europeans found in music from Queensbridge—Lillian giving voice to an explanation scratches that itch!

VJ

Not the response I expected but I did lol

Anushka Sen

Can we get an Adorno tote from this episode?? I need to show all these fucks that their lives and hobbies are bunk so I can show them perfect forms

Colton Greene

He would have fucking hated it like he fucking hated everything. I thought I was a miserable cunt before I got into Adorno but jfc.

benabu

It makes me really sad that I'll never get to know Adorno's thoughts on what I think is the best TV show of all time which is also a surprisingly joyful commentary on the inanity of work: Taskmaster

Anushka Sen

This essay was really interesting! For some reason, the discussion in this episode reminded me of Byung-Chul Han’s “The Burnout Society”… trying to live the sort of overserious life in the face of modern capitalism just gets turned into auto-exploitation, but then again, so does a lot of hobbyist activities.

Cold Material Handler

Great episode guys!

Tommaso Caprotti


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