Art as a Resistance to Our Burnout Culture
In her book Monoculture: How One Story Is Changing Everything, F. S. Michaels paraphrases philosopher Isaiah Berlin, writing
"If you look at any civilization... you will find a particular pattern of life that shows up again and again, that rules the age. Because of that pattern, certain ideas become popular and others fall out of favor. If you can isolate the governing pattern that a culture obeys, he believed, you can explain and understand the world that shapes how people think, feel and act at a distinct time in history."
Our master narrative is all about money. We have turned James Carville's simple-minded directive "It's the economy, stupid" into a motto to live by, along with Gordon Gecko's line from Wall Street, "Greed is good" and Jerry McGuire's "Show me the money!" Shannon Hayes, in her book Redefining Rich, calls this monoculture the Extractive Economy, and proposes its opposite, which she calls the Life-Serving Economy. Her book teaches the lessons she has learned running multi-generational Sap Bush Farm in upstate New York, but I'd argue her ideas apply in many other contexts, including the theater. The book describes
how to build your work around your family and the things you love the most; how to deepen your understanding of true wealth, capital, and finances; how to extract harmony and order from the chaos and stress of farming, family, and entrepreneurship; as well as how to maximize your rest and ignite your creativity to keep going for the long haul, year after year, generation after generation, through good times and crises, until this life-serving economy is the reality for everyone.
Another book to check out is philosopher Byung-Chul Han's The Burnout Society, where he argues that our relentless "achievement society" of constant improvement teaches us to "exploit ourselves passionately until we collapse. We realize ourselves, optimize ourselves unto death."
I would argue that such a monomyth works against the creation and appreciation of the arts, and that reading a book or poem, watching a play, visiting an art gallery has become an act of resistance to our extractive, burnout society. Even more revolutionary is to actually create works of art as an end in themselves, not as a means to fame and riches.
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