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Fritz Agency
Christian Dittus
Original language
English

EXHAUSTION

Anna Katharina Schaffner

A History

Today our fatigue feels chronic; our anxieties, amplified. Proliferating technologies command our attention. Many people complain of burnout, and economic instability and the threat of ecological catastrophe fill us with dread. We look to the past, imagining life to have once been simpler and slower, but extreme mental and physical stress is not a modern syndrome. Beginning in classical antiquity, this book demonstrates how exhaustion has always been with us and helps us evaluate more critically the narratives we tell ourselves about the phenomenon.

Medical, cultural, literary, and biographical sources have cast exhaustion as a biochemical imbalance, a somatic ailment, a viral disease, and a spiritual failing. It has been linked to loss, the alignment of the planets, a perverse desire for death, and social and economic disruption. Pathologized, demonized, sexualized, and even weaponized, exhaustion unites the mind with the body and society in such a way that we attach larger questions of agency, willpower, and well-being to its symptoms. Mapping these political, ideological, and creative currents across centuries of human development, Exhaustion finds in our struggle to overcome weariness a more significant effort to master ourselves.

Anna Katharina Schaffner is reader in comparative literature at the University of Kent. She has previously published on the histories of sexuality and psychoanalysis, modernist literature, and the avant-garde.
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Published 2016-06-01 by Columbia University Press

Comments

This is an impressive, accomplished and original book, one that promises to command a wide cross-disciplinary readership A formidable amount of reading and research has gone into this work, which stretches from classical antiquity to the present day, but the author marshals her material confidently and carries her learning lightly – the book is a pleasure to read. -- Michael Greaney, University of Manchester

Exhaustion is fluently written, brilliantly argued, and will provoke thoughtful minds with the suggestion that exhaustion has a history. -- Edward Shorter, University of Toronto