Skip to main content
ACLS Humanities EBook

ACLS
Humanities Ebook

Browse Books Help
Get access to more books. Log in with your institution.

Your use of this Platform is subject to the Fulcrum Terms of Service.

Share the story of what Open Access means to you

a graphic of a lock that is open, the universal logo for open access

University of Michigan needs your feedback to better understand how readers are using openly available ebooks. You can help by taking a short, privacy-friendly survey.

  1. Home
  2. Books
  3. Experience Without Qualities: Boredom and Modernity

Experience Without Qualities: Boredom and Modernity

Elizabeth S. Goodstein
Restricted You don't have access to this book. Please try to log in with your institution. Log in
Read Book
  • Overview

  • Contents

Although boredom appears to be a perennial feature of the human condition, it is linked to ways of experiencing time and thinking about human existence that are recognizably modern. By tracing the emergence and evolution of the modern discourse on boredom in French and German literary, philosophical, and sociological texts, Experience Without Qualities makes a contribution to the intellectual and cultural history of European modernity. In interpreting that discourse as the reflection of a specifically modern crisis of meaning, it contributes to the theorization of modernity and modern experience. And in bringing these historical and theoretical dimensions into conversation, it develops analytic strategies that are of broader application in interdisciplinary inquiry—for the methodological problems that arise in thinking about boredom as a phenomenon of both philosophical and more broadly cultural significance illuminate the constraints that confront any attempt to reflect historically on subjective experience in modernity.
  • Cover Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Dedication
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contents
  • Introduction: The Rhetoric of Boredom
  • Chapter 1: Ennui in Western Literature: Boredom as Existential Malaise
  • Chapter 2: The Normalization of Anomie: Boredom as Sociological Symptom
  • Chapter 3: Boredom and the Modernization of Subjectivity
  • Chapter 4: Georg Simmel’s Phenomenology of Modern Skepticism
  • Chapter 5: Martin Heidegger’s Existential Grammar of Boredom
  • Chapter 6: Being without Qualities: Robert Musil and the Self-Overcoming of Skepticism
  • Conclusion: Boredom and the Rhetoric of Reflection on Modernity
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Citable Link
Published: 2005
Publisher: Stanford University Press
ISBN(s)
  • 978-0-8047-5860-4 (paper)
ACLS Humanities Ebook Contact Us

Twitter

ACLS Michigan Publishing

ACLS HEB is a partnership between ACLS and Michigan Publishing

ACLS HEB

  • Browse and Search
  • About ACLS HEB
  • Impact and Usage

Information For

  • Librarians
  • Publishers
  • Societies

Quicklinks

  • Help/FAQ
  • Title List
  • MARC Records
  • KBART Records
  • Usage Stats
© 2023 ACLS Humanities Ebook · Accessibility · Preservation · Privacy · Terms of Service
Powered by Fulcrum logo · Log In
x This site requires cookies to function correctly.