Like all of us, I loved French-Israeli sociologist Eva Illouz's 2012 book "Why Love Hurts" and her other reflections on romantic love in capitalism (my area of self-proclaimed expertise too) so was very curious about this latest book (October 2024) "Explosive Modernity".
Obviously, this is a very timely read, given that we're living in an age of populism and the crucial role that emotions play in our general political life and the specific role these play for the populisms of the 21st century (Illouz published an English language book on the emotions of populism in 2023 so I assume this is a somewhat recycled German version).
I struggled a little with grasping the overall idea, not sure if it was the book or my lack of focus this week, possibly both.
What I liked overall was that she reconstructed how these emotions (emotions are political, socially constructed) are represented in literature, novels (themselves a product of modernity) mainly so this gave me quite a list of follow-up reads for my ongoing and upcoming beach holidays 🏖️ 📚
So the book looks at how modernity is playing out in our emotional lives and how this opens a window into the 'malaise' of the 21st century.
In particular this is linked to neoliberalism capitalism and consumerism and the dominant sentiment of hope, expectation and inevitable disappointment as well as new forms of envy, resentment and anger within a context of liberal democracy and its (broken) promise of (formal) equality. Then there's also the struggle over patriarchy and heteronormativity and sentiments/ reaction of shame, pride, jealousy and love.
This sounds somewhat disjointed as this is how I've read it. Maybe, in summary the point is as follows: modernity was driven by a sentiment of of hope, to liberate humanity from the chains of tradition and oppression. Now, a few centuries of nightmarish (and increasingly authoritarian) capitalism later, the dominant sentiment is fear, anger and nostalgia to some imagine white privilege island of happiness, before the evils of globalization (migration, terrorism, economic crises, pandemics, climate change etc) and cultural modernity's attack on established gender and sexuality norms. Nothing really ground shifting here but I really wasn't focused enough.
Off to some non-fiction now, there was enough real-life 21st century populism this week 🫣