In this groundbreaking book, American philosopher Grafton Tanner develops his theory of foreverism: an anti-nostalgic discourse that promises growth without change and life without loss. Engaging with pressing issues from the ecological impact of data storage to the rise of reboot culture, Tanner tracks the implications of a society averse to nostalgia and reveals the new weapons we have for eliminating it.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in D ausgeliefert werden.
François J. Bonnet, author of After Death
"Nostalgia, like authenticity, is an affliction that has been reconceived as aspiration. Tanner's Foreverism suggests that longing for past experiences and has become an alibi for a disappointment which has become structural, and which consigns us to endless consumption as a form of alienated work."
Rob Horning, former editor of Real Life