2018 Byung-Chul Han and The Subversive
2018 Byung-Chul Han and The Subversive
2018 Byung-Chul Han and The Subversive
empty,” writes the rising star of the German philosophical scene in his book The Scent of
Time. Byung-Chul Han draws a nuanced account of “lingering with God in loving
attentiveness” as a spur to action from Gregory the Great, Thomas Aquinas, and Meister
Eckhart, and then defends the mystical tradition from his own spiritual master, Martin
Heidegger.1 The late Heidegger began to turn his philosophical attention to the path of
creates the time and space for meaningful action in a breathless, frantic, and networked
modern society. Han’s next book, The Burnout Society, was a smash hit in Germany and his
native South Korea that will soon be translated into thirteen other languages.
contemplation, now animates debates about the future of the global Left,2 the legacy of
Foucault, and the direction of contemporary critical theory. Han’s recent popularity, then, is
what Deleuze would call “an event”: a perspective that is congenial to the Catholic tradition
pessimistic argument that power operates in late modernity in a way that eludes other
theorists, allowing for the “violence of positivity.” Hyperactive late moderns are not
encouraged to see our lives as “projects,” presented with myriad opportunities for self-
projects on the smartphone “rosaries” that keep track of our step-counts, ‘likes,’ and
‘retweets.’3 Capital profits from this, of course. But no enemy Other oppresses or infects
this modern society from the outside. Overachievers and “top dogs” suffer as much as
underachievers and underdogs, if not more, from burnout and its characteristic symptom:
depression.4 Without contemplation to create time for meaningful action, the modern
“burnout society” destroys itself from within, fatigued by overexerting its own frantic
energy.
Han returns to the original question of continental political thought. My old teacher
‘neuronal disease’ that afflicts the burnout society places him squarely within the tradition
of continental political thought.7 The traditional ‘continental’ explanations why the modern
bourgeois is compelled to chatter, scurry, and sweat revolve around some status-oriented
passion or another: amour propre in Rousseau (the original of this tradition), envy in
Kierkegaard, ressentiment in Nietzsche.8 While Han shares the orientation of these three
authors towards recovering contemplation, he claims that the late modern person is not in
competition with others; rather she is in “absolute competition” to always, endlessly outdo
herself.9 We are “burning out” on our own myriad self-improvement projects. The Internet
Han positions himself as the heir to Frankfurt School critical theory for the Internet
age.10 The Internet is not creating a more democratic world of communication, Han thinks;
rather “transparency” is a byword for a violence that is hollowing out various dimensions
3
of common life. For Han the Internet is basically an emotional medium. Hooking into our
desire for self-expression, it stimulates us to exploit ourselves, surveil one another, and
expose ourselves to Big Data.11 On the Internet, shut-in and isolated individuals “swarm,”
seized by identical emotional responses for which social media serve as conduits.12 In this
way, the Internet does violence to politics. Citizens are reduced to spectators, and
energy.13 Transparency means the disappearance of any private life that is not in public
view: society fetishizes what Han calls a “pornographic” transparency where everything is
obscenely exposed and for sale, an accelerating process that can only burn out in
information fatigue.14 Han considers the content, for instance, of the targeted social media
advertisements in the 2016 U.S. presidential elections. These emotionally charged ads
reduce the public sphere to the politics of personality.15 Transparency also means the
disappearance of any leisure time. Achievement subjects ‘take work home’ to send e-mails
on their couches, show their Instagram followers the private meals that they cook, drain
their emotions into screentime, and go to the beach of the gym for that perfect ‘selfie.’ Even
Capital has discovered this new “neoliberal” power regime, though no ‘capitalists’ sit
entirely outside of the system. “Friendly power” that permits and stimulates is more
effective than repressing workers, so social media and the “emotional management”
divisions of large corporations like HP and Chrysler encourage their users and employees
to share the same positive emotions.16 The modern achievement-subject whose life is a
project, and who understands the freedom emotional expression as the prospect of
4
unbridled subjectivity, is duped into the violence of positive thinking and exhausting
economic hyperactivity.
consumes the burnout society. Han takes up the late, contemplative Heidegger’s interest in
Gelassenheit (“releasement”), a term he borrows from the Christian mystical tradition that
means ‘letting things be as they are.’17 Han also draws upon Zen, and sometimes echoes the
therapeutic language of the “mindfulness” movement, but also points to resources that are
specifically (if not uniquely) Christian.: The figurative language of scripture has a depth
that is irreducible to “information.”18 notably Tthe sabbath19 and the narrative time of the
medieval calendar,.20 These aremeanwhile, are not simply days of rest or relaxation. They
mark time by bringing us into close proximity to something Other (in this case, God) that
cannot be reduced to some consumable difference and used for our own projects. Feast
days are days of Gelassenheit, an occasion for contemplation that lets God’s world be God’s.
pornification—to let Others be as they are.21 Beauty is particularly lovable. All beauty is
poignant, Han thinks, a “relational event” that stings us, only partially discloses itself, and is
memorable.22 The beautiful can call forth a kind of commitment and gratitude—Han does
not use the word ‘faith.’23 In this way, contemplating beauty can make time that spurs us to
otherness are three ways of describing Han’s strategy of resistance to the modern crisis of
hyperactivity.24
5
Han’s message about the importance of recovering contemplation amidst the clamor
of hyperactive modernity has been addressed specifically (but not exclusively) to Catholics
in Cardinal Sarah’s The Power of Silence: Against the Dictatorship of Noise. Certainly reading
Byung-Chul Han can help Catholics think about our own resources for resisting the
‘violence of positivity’ emanating from the hyperactivity of modern life. From Han’s
perspective, we can see Catholic faith and practice not as an anachronism or a liability, but
as a way of surviving the burnout of the late modern world. Han’s survey of our digital
malaise is more detailed and pointed, but Cardinal Sarah adds a dire warning from a
theistic perspective to it: because we are compelled to speak constantly, our world no
longer hears God. The danger is not only burning ourselves out, but shutting God out of our
lives. In one disturbing image of how far digital life has penetrated into our world, Cardinal
Sarah describes “a horrible forest” of cell phones brandished during the liturgy. 25 Bent
upon ‘talking through’ all of our problems, modern human beings seldom if ever stand in
awestruck silence. Han sees a new ersatz church replacing the old: “The smartphone is not
of the chance to listen for God, or even to look for wonder in the world. The nineteenth-
century Christian philosopher Søren Kierkegaard was first to describe this modern malaise,
since he belongs equally to the pastoral concerns of Cardinal Sarah and to Han’s tradition of
continental political thought. Such a re-exploration will allow us to trace deeply Christian
concerns present in Han’s critiques. Han’s philosophical concepts develop more than a few
6
Kierkegaardian themes for a digital age: transparency that annuls the distinction between
public and private; the violence of positivity when communication or chatter sweeps us
along meeting no negative resistance; burnout that comes from the stimulation to hyper-
Kierkegaard describes the present age as one of “chatter.” In fact, chatter is such an
interesting phenomenon to Kierkegaard that it inspires a unique foray into social and
political theory: a fifty-page excrescence that grows out of an appreciative book review of
Thomasine Gyllembourg’s 1845 novel Two Ages. (It is now available under the title The
Present Age.)29 It is from Kierkegaard’s text on the chattering public sphere that Heidegger
finds the phenomenon of “leveling” into “das Man” or “the they.” Han gives no attention to
mediated sympathy, that encounters no negativity.30 Nothing gets in the way of chatter.
Peter Fenves puts it well: “chatter is the medium in which everything makes sense.”31
Chatter is never stunned to silence. It does not stop to puzzle over contradictions. Chatter
cannot hear the ‘still small voice,’ because it turns even God—the ‘wholly other’—into god-
talk. Not only does God disappear amidst chatter, but so do human beings. When language
speaks itself, the human ‘zoon logon echon’ is no longer differentiated from the other
animals except as chatter.32 As a result, nobody speaks when there is chatter. Kierkegaard
warns, “eventually human speech will become just like the public: pure abstraction—there
7
will no longer be someone who speaks, but an objective reflection will gradually deposit a
kind of atmosphere.”33
but never cites him: “If everything becomes public right away, politics invariably grows
short of breath; it becomes short term and thins out into mere chatter.”34 When speech
loses its power to reveal real differences between the advantageous and the harmful, and
the just and the unjust, then the debates that animate politics fade away. Character, culture,
morality, and revolution: these require some passionate attachment to ideals. Kierkegaard
thinks that the line between good and evil was still drawn in the “age of revolution,” while
the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars still raged, but has disappeared in the age
predicts the depoliticized late-modern situation that Han describes, where committed
demand for transparency and a totalizing concern with personality.35 Instead of being
united by some ideal, individuals are united into a sensible, reflecting, and abstract public
Han develops Kierkegaardian insights about exhausting chatter in his critical theory
of digital neoliberalism, but he swerves away from two important Christian aspects of
Kierkegaard’s thought. First, Kierkegaard argues that it is because human beings are
envious that they remain fixated upon the chattering public sphere and cannot encounter
with God or the Other lovingly (and simply let them be), but Han is more reluctant to indict
human beings for some fault, failing or sin. Han’s argument that we late-moderns are in
8
to confront how much relational passions like vanity, contempt, and especially envy explain
what Catholic philosopher William Desmond calls a “primal porosity” of our being to God
and Otherness,36 but despite his appreciation for the Christian mystical tradition and
doubt, and a “world where existence originally felt at home.”37 Kierkegaard, however,
Han’s philosophical reflections are a gift for Christians. Han suggests how we might
refine a long Christian tradition of critical reflection on the public sphere, from Kierkegaard
to Cardinal Sarah, and update it for the digital age. Though Han may ultimately challenge
mysticism, and philosophy as critical resources for our modern predicament. The attention
Han’s work has received offers an opportunity to reawaken and rethink Christian concerns
with the hyperactivity of the connected late modern world, and to find spaces for prayerful
contemplation within it. Reading Han, we may remember that our smartphones make our
1 Byung-Chul Han, The Scent of Time: A Philosophical Essay on the Art of Lingering, trans.
Daniel Steuer (Cambridge: Polity, 2017), 110-112.
2 Byung-Chul Han, “Why Revolution is No Longer Possible,” trans. Erik Butler.
https://www.opendemocracy.net/transformation/byung-chul-han/why-revolution-is-no-
longer-possible
3 Byung-Chul Han, In the Swarm: Digital Prospects, trans. Erik Butler (Cambridge, MA: The
MIT Press, 2017), 22. See also Topology of Violence, trans. Amanda Demarco (Cambridge,
MA: The MIT Press, 2017), 12.
4 Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society, trans. Erik Butler (Stanford, CA: Stanford University
Press, 2015), 46 and 49; Topology of Violence, 81; Psychopolitics, trans. Erik Butler (London:
Verso, 2017), 7.
5 Byung-Chul Han, Topology of Violence, 31.
6 Stephen K. White, “Contemporary Continental Political Thought,” 480-500, in The Oxford
Handbook to Political Philosophy, ed. George Klosko (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2011).
7 Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society, 1-7.
8 Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Discourses and other early political writings, ed. Victor
Gourevitch (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997), 187; Søren Kierkegaard, Two
Ages: The Age of Revolution and the Present Age: A Literary Review, trans. Howard V. Hong
and Edna H. Hong (Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1978), 81; Friedrich Nietzsche,
9 Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society, 46.
10 Byung Chul-Han, Topology of Violence, 59.
11 Byung-Chul Han, Psychopolitics, trans. Erik Butler (London: Verso, 2017), 60.
12 Byung-Chul Han, In the Swarm: Digital Prospects, trans. Erik Butler (Cambridge, MA: The
2017), 18.
22 Byung-Chul Han, Saving Beauty, trans. Daniel Steuer (Cambridge, Polity, 2018), 75.
23 Byung-Chul Han, Saving Beauty, 80-81.
24 Byung-Chul Han, Saving Beauty, 68.
25 Robert Cardinal Sarah with Nicolas Diat, The Power of Silence: Against the Dictatorship of
accounts for the outsized influence of Kierkegaard as a political theorist upon German
intellectual life of the 1920s.
30 Byung-Chul Han, Saving Beauty, 10.
31 Peter Fenves, Chatter: Language and History in Kierkegaard (Stanford CA: Stanford UP,
1993), 138.
32 Søren Kierkegaard, Without Authority, trans. Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong
Review, trans. Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong (Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1978), 104.
34 Byung-Chul Han, The Transparency Society, trans. Erik Butler (Stanford, CA: Stanford
(Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1980), 146n; Philosophical Fragments and Johannes Climacus,
trans. Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong (Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1985), 145 and 155.