The spirit of hope

Byung-Chul Han

Book - 2024

"A spectre is haunting us: fear. We are constantly confronted with apocalyptic scenarios: pandemics, world war, the climate catastrophe. Images of the end of the world and the end of human civilization are conjured up with ever greater urgency. Anxiously, we face a bleak future. Preoccupied with crisis management, life becomes a matter of survival. But it is precisely at such moments of fear and despair that hope arises like a phoenix from the ashes. Only hope can give us back a life that is more than mere survival. Fear isolates people and closes them off from one another; hope, by contrast, unites people and forms communities. It opens up a meaningful horizon that re-invigorates and inspires life. It nurtures fantasy and enables ...us to think about what is yet to come. It makes action possible because it infuses our world with purpose and meaning. Hope is the spring that liberates us from our collective despair and gives us a future. In this short essay on hope, Byung-Chul Han gives us the perfect antidote to the climate of fear that pervades our world." --

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Subjects
Published
Cambridge ; Hoboken : Polity Press 2024.
Language
English
German
Main Author
Byung-Chul Han (author)
Other Authors
Anselm Kiefer, 1945- (illustrator), Daniel Steuer (translator)
Item Description
Originally published in German as "Der Geist der Hoffnung : wider die Gesellschaft der Angst" in 2023.
Physical Description
vii, 97 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781509565191
  • List of Illustrations
  • Prelude
  • Hope and Acting
  • Hope and Knowledge
  • Hope as a Form of Life
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this soulful meditation, philosopher Han (The Crisis of Narration) draws from the writings of Albert Camus, Erich Fromm, Franz Kafka, and other thinkers to reflect on staying hopeful during fraught times. Pushing back against Camus's contention that hope spurs resignation, Han argues that it instead motivates people to act by enabling them to imagine possible futures worth fighting for. In this capacity, hope becomes, as poet Ingeborg Bachmann contended, a "condition of the possibility of living." "The deeper the despair, the more intense the hope," Han posits, noting that Czech human rights activist Václav Havel viewed hope as a commitment to an idea's righteousness rather than any expectation of a positive outcome. Suggesting that hope can also foster community, Han describes how in Kafka's short story "The Great Wall of China," the endless task of building the eponymous wall unites those involved in its construction around the "hopeless hope" that it will one day be completed. Though some of Han's finer points are lost in the occasionally vague prose ("It is the authority of the other as a transcendence that raises me up in the face of absolute despair"), he still makes a rousing case for holding onto hope even, and perhaps especially, in times of hardship. This is sure to lift readers' spirits. Illus. (Dec.)

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