Art Must Act

44 pointsposted 5 days ago
by tintinnabula

3 Comments

BolexNOLA

12 hours ago

> But his friend Hannah Arendt took up many of his ideas in her opus The Human Condition (1958), which argues that political life, like aesthetics, is characterised by an innate, albeit now widely ignored, human need for self-display through performances that are not labour, or routine, or ritual, but what she, following Rosenberg, called ‘action’. Like her friend, Arendt was concerned that possibilities for action in our society were being eroded by mechanisation and bureaucratisation on the one hand, and, on the other, illusory forms of pseudo-action, ranging from the benumbing pleasures of the entertainment industry to the chimeras of mass politics.

I feel like there’s some insight here on how we all interact not just on HN but on social media/forums more broadly but i can’t quite connect the disparate ideas floating around in my head right now.

Nevermark

10 hours ago

I read a lot of the article.

Like the paragraph you quoted, it feels to me like a mix of ideology and insights. But I am not quite sure where the separating lines are.

BolexNOLA

2 hours ago

Yeah there’s definitely a unifying thread here but it’s basically half philosophical treatise, half musings on a lesser known historical topic.

Not that I am critiquing it or saying it’s a bad thing. I actually really enjoyed it. I just can’t quite put my finger on what I got out of it lol