Just Finished Reading: Selfie – How the West became Self-Obsessed by Will Storr (FP: 2017) [336pp]
This wasn’t the book I was expecting. On picking it up, paying for it, and carrying it home I thought it was going to be on the Selfie ‘craze’ that swept the world some years ago and peppered the Internet with pictures of people having amazing times at amazing heights and, from time to time, falling off them. In passing it was kind of about that obsessive (and sometimes fatal) self-regard but it went deeper both in time and space and actually turned out much better than it might have been.
The author follows the idea of the individual and
Individualism from identifying with the Tribe, to being the Hero in your own
personal narrative (yet another thing we’ve received from the Ancient Greeks!),
to ideas of Christian personal salvation, to the modern idea of
self-actualisation and empowerment, to the uber-individualism of Ayn Rand and
finally into the present of the perfect online persona complete with video
evidence of once in a lifetime experiences (on repeat) and a full list of
everything you’ve ever had for breakfast. Along the way the author tries out
monastic retreats, Californian ‘let it all hang out’ experiences and meets up
with semi-professional self-publicist’s who take selfies at funerals because
they look good in black. It’s quite a journey if a bit tedious and
self-indulgent at times (oh, the irony).
Apart from a few wobbles and meandering detours this is a
pretty good exploration of the way we got to be the most self-absorbed and self-referential
culture in human history – and what damage it’s increasingly doing, rather
ironically, to our self-esteem. With significant increases in youth suicide – particularly
amongst young women but also increasing in young men – an important element is
the (often vain) attempt to keep up with your peers and to keep in the spotlight.
With seemingly everything at stake – were ‘social value’ has become a matter of
life and death to some – any obstacle which in more normal times would be
viewed as a ‘bump in the road’ becomes an existential crisis that only drastic
action can address. Where a belief in absolute perfectionism takes hold the
fact that no one is, or can be, perfect is total anathema and inevitably
results in a rejection of reality and the mental/emotional issues caused by the
effort to maintain a fictional existence. It is, to understate the issue
massively, not the way to live your life. I’ve added this into the ‘Self-Help’
label because of the final section ‘How to Stay Alive in the Age of
Perfectionism’ which addresses some of the issues the perfection driven have to
deal with. Overall this is a pretty good, if sometimes frighteningly
depressing, look at the society/culture we have created. Recommended,
especially if you’re struggling with the Social Media monster.
6 comments:
i know i don't exist because i can see right through me, haha...
I'm very interested in this. I'm forever stuck between my sympathy for Rand-esque individualism (why should I live for a bunch of deranged naked chimps who want to give me orders) and the wisdom of countless traditions that preach the futility of making the ego central.
@ Mudpuddle: Existence (or otherwise) is a WHOLE other question - and a fascinating one too!
@ Stephen: I think you'll definitely like parts of this. Not sure about other bits though - but I do recommend it to you. The tension between Individualism and the Group is of great interest to me. I definitely think that the Individual is important just not Primary... at least not in any *workable* society. But, as with most things concerning humans, its complicated!
HAHAAAHHHA!! love puns!
I read the Tao Te Ching everyday. It helps with all this insanity.
@ Judy: It's always good to find something that can do that. Most especially these days!
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