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How Suffering Became Cinematic - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
Manage episode 478426756 series 3604075
How Suffering Became Cinematic
We are often told that suffering is meaningful. That trauma refines us. That resilience is beautiful. This episode refuses all of it. We listen not for inspiration but for rupture—for the contradictions that emerge when romanticized stories are interrupted by real, unresolved lives.
Here, caregiving isn’t framed as devotion—it’s structural disappearance. Neurodivergence is not charming—it’s socially masked exhaustion. Homelessness isn’t freedom—it’s logistical, economic, and ontological exclusion. Romanticization is revealed as a quiet violence, and what remains are not metaphors, but fragments.
Drawing from thinkers like Simone Weil, Fred Moten, Sara Ahmed, and Giorgio Agamben, we explore contradiction not as something to fix, but as something to hold. The episode resists closure. It listens for the residue of lives miss red and refuses to translate them into insight. This is not a story. It is a structure.
Why Listen?
- Hear stories that remain outside the frame of redemption
- Understand how romanticization functions as erasure
- Engage contradiction as an ethical and philosophical form
- Learn from Weil, Moten, Caruth, Federici, Butler
Listen On:
Bibliography
- Ahmed, Sara. Living a Feminist Life. Duke University Press, 2017.
- Agamben, Giorgio. Homo Sacer. Stanford University Press, 1998.
- Butler, Judith. Precarious Life. Verso Books, 2004.
- Caruth, Cathy. Unclaimed Experience. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996.
- Federici, Silvia. Re-enchanting the World. PM Press, 2019.
- Moten, Fred. In the Break. University of Minnesota Press, 2003.
- Weil, Simone. Gravity and Grace. Routledge, 2002.
This is not an episode about meaning. It’s about the refusal to make suffering bearable through story.
#Romanticization #Contradiction #Philosophy #SimoneWeil #FredMoten #SaraAhmed #JudithButler #CathyCaruth #SilviaFederici #Agamben #DeeperThinking #OntologicalExclusion #UnresolvedLives #Trauma #NarrativeViolence
233 episodes
Manage episode 478426756 series 3604075
How Suffering Became Cinematic
We are often told that suffering is meaningful. That trauma refines us. That resilience is beautiful. This episode refuses all of it. We listen not for inspiration but for rupture—for the contradictions that emerge when romanticized stories are interrupted by real, unresolved lives.
Here, caregiving isn’t framed as devotion—it’s structural disappearance. Neurodivergence is not charming—it’s socially masked exhaustion. Homelessness isn’t freedom—it’s logistical, economic, and ontological exclusion. Romanticization is revealed as a quiet violence, and what remains are not metaphors, but fragments.
Drawing from thinkers like Simone Weil, Fred Moten, Sara Ahmed, and Giorgio Agamben, we explore contradiction not as something to fix, but as something to hold. The episode resists closure. It listens for the residue of lives miss red and refuses to translate them into insight. This is not a story. It is a structure.
Why Listen?
- Hear stories that remain outside the frame of redemption
- Understand how romanticization functions as erasure
- Engage contradiction as an ethical and philosophical form
- Learn from Weil, Moten, Caruth, Federici, Butler
Listen On:
Bibliography
- Ahmed, Sara. Living a Feminist Life. Duke University Press, 2017.
- Agamben, Giorgio. Homo Sacer. Stanford University Press, 1998.
- Butler, Judith. Precarious Life. Verso Books, 2004.
- Caruth, Cathy. Unclaimed Experience. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996.
- Federici, Silvia. Re-enchanting the World. PM Press, 2019.
- Moten, Fred. In the Break. University of Minnesota Press, 2003.
- Weil, Simone. Gravity and Grace. Routledge, 2002.
This is not an episode about meaning. It’s about the refusal to make suffering bearable through story.
#Romanticization #Contradiction #Philosophy #SimoneWeil #FredMoten #SaraAhmed #JudithButler #CathyCaruth #SilviaFederici #Agamben #DeeperThinking #OntologicalExclusion #UnresolvedLives #Trauma #NarrativeViolence
233 episodes
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