In his most recent book, published in 2020, Byung-Chul Han focus his attention in the role social rituals play in integrating and creating cohesion in our societies. Its absence is at the same time cause and consequence of today’s narcissism and individualism, which is making us to feel disorientated and lost in society, as well as causing the rise of xenophobic nationalism again.
The Korean-German philosopher has become in the last years one the most relevant voices in understanding the complexities of contemporary society. First a student of metallurgy student, Byung Chul-Han moved to Germany at 26 years old to study philosophy, without knowing any German and almost no philosophy. But through a specialization in cultural studies, and the publication of more than 15 books, he has become one of the most important philosophers of our time. By scrutinizing the sociological consequences of today’s capitalism, his acute vision explores its relation with the atomization of a society –which is creating narcissistic individuals–, the self-exploitation of workers, or the alarming increase of mental health problems in our societies.
In order to do this, the author does not rely on quantified data, but rather almost always on the hermeneutical and argumentative analysis used in his field. The way he does this is by recurrently using short phrases with abundant and powerful meaning, almost using them as aphorisms. His style is direct and resounding, and the structure of the book is circular, in the sense that it has a general, main idea in the book, which is the disappearance of rituals and the atomization of society, which flows through the book in connection with other subtopics, which conform the small chapters of the book, ten in total.
Although his claims are strong and robust, the author often supports his statements with quotes or thoughts of the work of other philosophers. Particularly, in The Disappearance of Rituals we find references to the works of Hannah Arendt, Immanuel Kant, Foucault or Zygmunt Bauman, whose concept of “liquid society” shares similarities with the ideas of the Korean philosopher.
He first starts the book with one of the key claims, which is that “rituals generate a community without communication, but now we have communication without community” (Han, 2020, pag. 11). Why do rituals generate community? Because of its capacity to transmit and represent the values of the community. In that sense, rituals are “symbolic techniques of home installation” (Han, 2020, pag. 23) because they are able to give a sense of durability, of recognition, stability and belonging to a place. As an example of these rituals he gives funerals. In them, collective emotions are represented, and the protagonist is the community, not the individuals. These collective feelings consolidate the community even without communication, because of the importance of the ritual itself. Other examples could be annual rituals such as Christmas or New Years Eve, but the author focuses more in the role played by religion and its temples. The word Synagogue, per example, comes from the Greek word synagein, which means “to bring together”. However, outside of religious rituals, Byung-Chul Han does not give more examples besides from the Japanese ritual of having tea. Hence, it remains unclear what is his exact definition of rituals, and how were they present in everyday life before.
Why are rituals in disappearance and what are the main consequences of it? The author often writes about the “neoliberal regime” as the main actor responsible for today’s situation. However, the term remains vague and unclear. Although its understandable that the main focus is not put on the regime itself, but rather on the consequences of it, it still feels necessary to specify it more. It is not clear if we are all part of the neoliberal regime, or if it is something imposed on us that has changed society. The changes the author talks about is the passage from a united community to an atomised society in which rituals, symbols and formalisms are seen as a something conservative and negative, that does not allow the flourishing of the individual, which is the centre of today’s world. Individualism, fundamental in modernity, has transformed in narcissism, creating divisions between individuals and thus not allowing communities to be formed. Per example, tattoos in the XIX were used as a part of community rituals, often being shared by multiple individuals. On the contrary, now are only used as a form of authenticity, converting ourselves into individual capitalist products. The same could be said about our social media, in which everything is about the individual profiles and to be perceived as authentic in them.
However, without those rituals, pictures and metaphors creators of sense of belonging, emotions become individual and isolated. And this can derive in the sensation of emptiness and depression. After all, replacing real communitarian bonds for superficial, social media ones, is not the same at all. As a consequence, the feeling of being lost in our society is increasing, also because of globalization is too similar everywhere. Cities become standardised, and cultures become a local product that is sold to tourists, but not really felt by its society. Also, as explained by Zygmunt Bauman in his book Liquid modernity (Bauman, 1999), everything in our societies changes very rapidly, making us to loose the feeling of belonging to places and cultures.
Following this path of thinking, Byung-Chul Han correlates these changes with the increase of nationalism in the last decade. Although the rise of nationalism cannot be explained only by one factor, his arguments are able to successfully connect the two phenomena. Globalization, he argues, is creating an excess in the openness of our societies to foreign cultures, which is dissolving communities. Human beings are local, and in order to create a “we”, it also needs to create a “them”. If this is not possible, and cultures are not relevant anymore, our human nature will tend to close itself in smaller communities, even if this means creating a xenophobic nationalism.
This critic of globalization is often not understood by the left, because it sees the protection of local communities as something conservative that needs to be changed. However, it is totally normal if an elderly person feels lost because of not recognizing his own neighbourhood anymore, due to demographic and cultural changes in them. And if the left does not understand that feeling, but it rather rejects it by considering it something xenophobic or racist, then the cultural battle is going to be won by the nationalist far-right. Instead of judging people who is feeling lost in our societies because of globalization, we should give them alternative discourses that are able to unite local communities, rituals and cultures, with the ideas of mutual recognition, respect, and cultural enrichment. A different globalization its possible, in which cultures are strengthened rather than weakened. The message of Byung-Chul Han should not be overlooked.