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Surplus-Enjoyment: A Guide For The Non-Perplexed

✍ Scribed by Slavoj Žižek


Publisher
Bloomsbury Academic
Year
2022
Tongue
English
Leaves
394
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Contemporary life is defined by excess. There must always be more, there is never enough. We need a surplus to what we need to be able to truly enjoy what we have. Slavoj Žižek's guide to surplus (and why it's enjoyable) begins by arguing that what is surplus to our needs is by its very nature unsubstantial and unnecessary. But, perversely, without this surplus, we wouldn't be able to enjoy, what is substantial and necessary. Indeed, without the surplus we wouldn't be able to identify what was the perfect amount.

Is there any escape from the vicious cycle of surplus enjoyment or are we forever doomed to simply want more? Engaging with everything from
The Joker film to pop songs and Thomas Aquinas to the history of pandemics, Žižek argues that recognising the society of enjoyment we live in for what it is can provide an explanation for the political impasses in which we find ourselves today. And if we begin, even a little bit, to recognise that the nuggets of 'enjoyment' we find in excess are as flimsy and futile, might we find a way out?

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Halftitle page
Series page
Title page
Copyright page
Contents
Ouverture Living in a Topsy-Turvy World
From Catastrophe to Apocalypse . . . and Back
An Unexpected Lustgewinn
2 + a
“Good Luck, Mr Hegel!”
1 Where is the Rift? Marx, Capitalism and Ecology
Neoconservative Communism
Hegel in the Critique of Political Economy
Actual Life versus Substanceless Subjectivity
Eco-proletarians and the Limits of Valorization
No Capitalism—And No Way Out of it—Without Science
Is Abstract Labor Universal?
Workers or Worker?
Fiction and/In Reality
The Emancipatory Potential of Capitalist Madness
Ecology with Alienation
Last Exit for Communism
2 A Non-binary Difference? Psychoanalysis, Politics, and Philosophy
Critique of Critique
“They are Both Worse!”
The Limits of Historicization
A Critique of Lacanian Ideology
A (Malevolent) Political Neutrality of the Analyst
The Limits of Historicization
Formulas of Sexuation
The Vagaries of Truth
Trans versus Cis
Sexual Difference is Not Binary
From Special to General Theory of Queerness
Why There is No True Love Without Betrayal
Kurc te gleda . . . Through Lubitsch’s Looking Glass
3 Surplus-Enjoyment, Or, Why We Enjoy our Oppression
Vikings, Solaris, Katla: The Big Other and its Vicissitudes
The Birth of the Superego Out of the Breakage of the Law
From Authority to Permissiveness . . . and Back
No Freedom Without Impossibility
Repression, Oppression, Depression
So What is Surplus-Enjoyment?
Enjoying Alienation
Martin Luther as a Film Noir Figure
A Desire Not to Have a Mother
Finale Subjective Destitution as a Political Category
The Two Ends of Philosophy
Man as a Katastrophe
“We Must Live Till We Die”
From Being-Towards-Death to Undeadness
Revolutionary Self-Destitution . . .
. . . versus Religious Fundamentalism
“Les non-dupes errent”
Lambs to the Slaughter
The Two Faces of Anachronism
Destructive Nihilism
The Return of Vanishing Mediators
Notes
Index


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