Out Of Everything I Miss Myself The Most: A set of stories about Hong Kong, Heidegger, the other f-word that isn't funny (fecundity), my father, and Henry.
2024 (Engelska)Självständigt arbete på avancerad nivå (masterexamen), 10 hp
Studentuppsats (Examensarbete) [Forskning på konstnärlig grund]
Abstract [en]
This essay explores the concept of societal fecundity—the collective capacity to generate new and diverse ideas—as a counterpoint to the homogeny and monopolization of cultural, technological, and social frameworks. Drawing on personal anecdotes, historical moments, and philosophical reflections, it examines how shifts in cultural paradigms often arise from moments of disillusionment, rupture, and the embrace of “otherness.”
The essay draws on Murray Bookchin’s critique of consensus, emphasizing the importance of fostering dissonance and minority perspectives within society to cultivate innovation. By examining the example of Hong Kong’s protesters, it argues that creativity often emerges from those at the margins, where new technologies and frameworks for understanding the world are born in response to systemic challenges.
Technology, the essay argues, is not neutral—it is a construct of human intention and values. As such, it can and should be remade to reflect diverse ways of Being. Today’s fixation on individual genius, embodied in figures like Elon Musk or Sam Altman, ignores the collective processes and fertile disagreements that truly drive societal progress. It advocates for a world defined by the fecundity of ideas, where dissonance and diversity are embraced as essential to creativity and social renewal.
Ort, förlag, år, upplaga, sidor
2024. , s. 20
Nyckelord [en]
art, contemporary, self, Hong Kong, Heidegger, fecundity, Henry, Bookchin, DIY Ethos, Otherness, Frameworks of Being, Punk
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Identifikatorer
URN: urn:nbn:se:kkh:diva-1002OAI: oai:DiVA.org:kkh-1002DiVA, id: diva2:1929017
Handledare
Examinatorer
2025-01-282025-01-182025-01-28Bibliografiskt granskad