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Here Lies Bitterness - Healing from Resentment

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  • 226pages
  • 8 heures de lecture

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Political philosophy and psychoanalysis share a fundamental problem in human and societal life: the deep-seated discontent that undermines existence. The focus of analysis remains the quest for origins, understanding the intimate self, its shortcomings, troubles, and desires. However, there comes a moment when knowledge alone is insufficient to heal, calm, or soothe. To achieve this, one must transcend pain, anger, grief, resignation, and, more exemplarily, resentment—bitterness that can consume us even as we might discover its subtle and liberating flavor. The democratic adventure also proposes a confrontation with victimhood rumination. The question of good governance may pale in comparison to this: what can be done, at any level, institutional or otherwise, to ensure that this democratic entity can curb the resentment drive, the only force that can threaten its sustainability? Here we are, individuals and the rule of law, facing the same challenge: to diagnose resentment, its dark power, and resist the temptation to make it the engine of individual and collective stories.

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Here Lies Bitterness - Healing from Resentment, Cynthia Fleury

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Année de publication
2022
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Titre
Here Lies Bitterness - Healing from Resentment
Langue
Anglais
Éditeur
Polity Press
Publié
2022
Format
souple
Pages
226
ISBN10
1509551042
ISBN13
9781509551040
Séries
Description
Political philosophy and psychoanalysis share a fundamental problem in human and societal life: the deep-seated discontent that undermines existence. The focus of analysis remains the quest for origins, understanding the intimate self, its shortcomings, troubles, and desires. However, there comes a moment when knowledge alone is insufficient to heal, calm, or soothe. To achieve this, one must transcend pain, anger, grief, resignation, and, more exemplarily, resentment—bitterness that can consume us even as we might discover its subtle and liberating flavor. The democratic adventure also proposes a confrontation with victimhood rumination. The question of good governance may pale in comparison to this: what can be done, at any level, institutional or otherwise, to ensure that this democratic entity can curb the resentment drive, the only force that can threaten its sustainability? Here we are, individuals and the rule of law, facing the same challenge: to diagnose resentment, its dark power, and resist the temptation to make it the engine of individual and collective stories.