
Lauren Berlant is George M. Pullman Professor of English at the University of Chicago. Her national sentimentality trilogy—The Anatomy of National Fantasy, The Queen of America Goes to Washington City, and The Female Complaint—has now morphed into a quartet, with Cruel Optimism, featured in her Rorotoko interview. She has also edited Intimacy (Chicago, 2000), Our Monica, Ourselves: The Clinton Affair and the National Interest (NYU, 2001), Compassion: the Culture and Politics of an Emotion (Routledge, 2004), and On the Case (Critical Inquiry, 2007). Lauren Berlant is a co-editor of Critical Inquiry, a founding member of the art/activist group Feel Tank Chicago, and she blogs at supervalentthought.com.
Sometimes a book like mine makes people feel that, if they don’t know the films or novels or cases written about, they can’t read a given chapter or judge its claims.This is a theoretical book, but it floats its ideas by way of processes that are everywhere around us—processes of dependency, labor, fantasy, and intimacy—and then it uses political and aesthetic cases to exemplify their impacts.I hope my storytelling is good enough that you can imagine the scene or situation that compels thought: often people read my work slowly and dreamily and puzzle over things.I aim for the scene I’m describing to open up a question for you. If the questions become more vital and interesting in the reading, then I’ve done my job. If readers then encounter these questions in the world, they might have a different way to think and act in relation to them.Changing the dynamic within relation might actually change things significantly, that’s my hope about the impact of a way of seeing world-building. We live in an emotionally charged time: seeing how the work of relational emotion shapes our very sinews might clarify a lot about what’s going on, what’s stuck, and what’s possible.One example of the book’s challenge is its discussion of “normativity.” Some people think of norms and conventions as the unfair discipline of free people’s desires or as unimaginative clichés. Often norms are, and often conventions reduce complexity to simplicity. At the same time, though, norms and conventions are not maps toward an easy way of life: they’re aspirational anchors: especially for so many people whose tethers to the world are loose or unreliable.Plus, the book argues that objects of desire are placeholders for a desire to more-than-survive. Being hooked to a norm or a convention is also an attempt to maintain a stable enough orientation so that life might be moved through flourishingly. See pp. 166-169, for example, the Rosetta chapter, although the whole chapter is about this, as are many others.How to interrupt one’s reliance on toxic norms? The Two Girls, Fat and Thin chapter and the Intuitionists chapter engage how habits are formed and relied on and interrupted (through food, through conversation, through cruising, and so on).Another thing I learned from the book is to think about optimism as noisy and often unbearable. The intro, the title chapter, and the final chapter on “Desire for the Political” are about art and political techniques of bearing optimism, and also about the racial, sexual, and economic distribution of affects of belonging.For people not so art-inclined, the “Slow Death” chapter works through the obesity epidemic in terms of sovereignty and responsibility. How much does the pressure of contemporary capitalist working life put pressure on the small pleasures to sustain our survival? What is the relation between physical health and mental health in the process of moving through life?Many people read my books to find a language for the affective dimensions of structural inequality: in Cruel Optimism this is performed as a crisis in optimism about the prospects of living on.I am actually pretty lame at imagining a repaired world. What I provide best are depictions of what makes people stuck in the face of the ordinary pulsations of a fraying crisis. People have called the book the affective register of the 99%: and I think there’s something to that, as I am looking for what Raymond Williams called the “structure of feeling” of the historical present that that moves across individual, collective, and political life.So Cruel Optimism tracks the rise of a precarious public sphere. It sees the world as in an impasse and a situation beyond the normative good life structures, where people have a hard time imagining a genre that makes sense of life while they’re in the middle of it. I’m saying that intense personal emotions about the shape and fraying of life are also collective, and have to do with an economic crisis meeting up with a crisis in the reproduction of fantasy. I talk about this as a waning of the “good life” genres.These concepts matter to me because I want better objects for better optimism (there’s a slogan!). But to achieve this we need to move our analyses of the historical present into the exploratory mode that crisis, regardless, forces us to occupy. This is not a time for assurance but for experiment—to have patience with failure, with trying things out, to try new forms of life that also might not work—which doesn’t make them worse than what’s there now. It is a time for using the impasse that we’re in to learn something about how to imagine better economies of intimacy and labor.Capitalist crisis has tightened up the time of the world: all over, people are in sync in their sense of contingency and social fragility, even if they might have wildly different accounts of it. Sometimes this recognition is unbearable and produces violence: because we know the change and the loss has already happened, and yet it is unbelievable and unbearable, while being borne. Cruel Optimism attempts to chronicle the dramas of adjustment—the dramas of consciousness and of mediated life—that force into being new recognitions of what a life is and ought to be.

Lauren Berlant Cruel Optimism Duke University Press352 pages, 6 x 9 inches978 0822350972 hb978 0822351115 pb
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