On the Inconvenience of Other People by Lauren Berlant (review)

Excerpt

Attachment is a double-edged sword. This idea is the scaffolding of the late Lauren Berlant’s pivotal work, Cruel Optimism (2011), which explores the idea that attachment to a collectively invested fantasy of “the good life” acts in disservice of personal growth and lasting fulfillment. The Inconvenience of Other People ostensibly repeats this structure while reattributing the role of fantasy. The premise here is that attachments to other people act in disservice to the fantasy of personal sovereignty. Of course, both texts argue for collectivity and for a recasting of the ordinary that structures current fantasies. But while Cruel Optimism builds around the unavoidable condition of fantasy, Inconvenience takes relations within the present as its fundamentally unavoidable condition, specifically the drive to be in relation even though such relations are inconvenient.

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