All Things Are Too Small
Essays in Praise of Excess
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- 159,00 kr
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- 159,00 kr
Utgivarens beskrivning
A spiky, funny and intellectually dazzling response to modern culture - from BDSM to mindfulness to Sally Rooney
'Bracing and brilliant ... scintillating writing of breadth and power' Kate Kellaway, Observer
'A radical and important book' James Wood, author of Serious Noticing
'Seriously precise ... and very funny' Telegraph
In All Things Are Too Small, virtuoso young critic and philosopher Becca Rothfeld turns her clear gaze to a series of interconnected cultural and political questions - about aesthetics, taste, literature, equality, power and sexuality. In a healthy culture, she argues, economic security allows for wild extremes of aesthetic experimentation, yet in our society we've got it flipped. The gap between rich and poor yawns hideously wide, while we compensate with misguided attempts to effect equality in love and art, where it does not belong.
Our culture's embrace of minimalism has left our souls impoverished: decluttering has reduced our living spaces to empty non-places; the mindfulness trend has emptied our minds of the thoughts that make us who we are; the regularization of sex has drained it of unpredictability and therefore true eroticism; and our quest for balance has yielded fictions whose protagonists aspire to excise their appetites.
As intellectually illuminating as it is gloriously carnal and earthy, All Things Are Too Small is a much needed tonic in a world of oppressive sterility and limitation, and a soul cry for derangement, imbalance, obsession, ravishment and disorder.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Washington Post book critic Rothfeld's erudite debut collection muses on the merits of indulgence. In "More Is More," Rothfeld likens the spare storytelling in "fragment novels" by such authors as Kate Zambreno and Jenny Offill to the decluttering ethos espoused by Marie Kondo, critiquing both for prioritizing utility over sentimentality. Individuality, she suggests, is achieved through the accumulation of things (friends, fears, and phobias, for instance) one doesn't need. "Wherever You Go, You Could Leave" derides the recent mindfulness vogue and contends that though some people might find the mental exercises soothing, the movement's emphasis on tranquility and acceptance serves to divert attention from the material inequalities and unjust labor conditions that stress people out in the first place. Elsewhere, the author pushes back against a recent spate of books decrying the "rough, casual, and extramarital sex that the sexual revolution legitimated" and posits that the ostensibly restrained films of French director Éric Rohmer "trade in unfamiliar forms of exaltation," brimming with tenderness rather than overt sexuality. Rothfeld has a knack for aphorism ("There is nothing more foreign to justice than love"), and it's an absolute pleasure to watch her idiosyncratic arguments unfold. This is a triumph.