How are our lives meaningful? What is the relationship of loss to creativity? How can we best engage and overcome our suffering? From Socrates to Foucault, Western philosophers have sought to define ‘the art of living’—the complex craft of human existence that elicits our thoughtful participation, and the idea that even though death escapes our control, life is not something that simply happens to us in a passive manner but is instead a process that invites our active and lively engagement. A World of Fragile Things offers a distinctly psychoanalytic perspective on ‘the art of living, ‘ one that focuses on ongoing and ever-evolving processes of self-fashioning rather than defining a fixed and unitary sense of self. With a compelling blend of philosophical insight and psychoanalytic acumen, Mari Ruti asks experts and readers alike to probe the complexities of human existence, offering a contemporary outlook on some of the most enduring questions of Western thought.
Table of Content
Introduction
1. The Art of Living
2. The Pursuit of Happiness
3. The Remaking of Fate
4. The Fall of Fantasies
5. The Residue of Love
Epilogue
Notes
Index
About the author
Mari Ruti is Associate Professor of Critical Theory at the University of Toronto and author of
Reinventing the Soul: Posthumanist Theory and Psychic Life.