• Work
  • Blog
  • Media
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

Justin Clark

Public Historian & Digital Humanist
  • Work
  • Blog
  • Media
  • About
  • Contact

BLOG

In Praise of Idleness for the 21st Century

June 14, 2023

In all, we need a vision for the praising of idleness for the 21st century— embracing Bertrand Russell’s dedication to less work and more play for all while adapting it to the unique challenges we face today. We must go against the grain of the mindset of overwork and develop a healthy balance between labor and leisure, one that places work in the proper perspective: as a means for us to achieve all the things we want to do and not as the end that we constantly judge ourselves by. One of the only silver linings of the COVID-19 pandemic was that it gave us more time to be home with our loved ones, to finally read that book we’ve been wanting to read for forever, or to bake the perfect loaf of sourdough bread. It was a moment for us to radically reevaluate the basic conditions of our overworked, underpaid, and wildly burnt out society. People realized, many for the first time, that there was a world beyond work.

As such, they started to reconsider the basic work arrangements in this country, which have not changed in a major way in nearly 100 years. It is high time we reevaluate this setup and move towards a leisure-oriented society; it will not just help those like me who work in an office, but it will help gig workers and part-time folks to improve their wages and benefits. A better balance between work and leisure won’t only make for better employees, but it will make for better citizens. With workers having more free time and less economic precarity, they will be able to fully participate in our representative democracy. They can devote energies towards improving our societies— from education and healthcare to election workers and candidate canvassers. They can build the social movements and political programs necessary to improve our world. The fight for less work is not merely a slight change in our daily arrangements; it's a revolution that will radically alter our lives and our country for the better.

Read More
In Politics, Philosophy Tags Philosophy, Capitalism, Socialism, Bertrand Russell
Comment
Emma Goldman Article Banner.jpg

“The Eternal Yea to Life”: The Radical Humanism of Emma Goldman

September 30, 2020

During her many years of activism, anarchist intellectual Emma Goldman wrote for a variety of publications, including Mother Earth, a magazine she founded in 1906. Her writing championed free speech and expression, free love and open relationships, anarchism, the rights of labor, education, birth control, and criticisms of religion. This essay will explore Goldman’s ideas about atheism and how they fit into her larger ideological framework. As her writings will show, three core themes permeate Goldman’s work: strong advocacy for individual freedom, rejection of Christianity, and the defense of atheism. In all, Emma Goldman’s radical atheism was rooted in her love of humanity, and while the term didn’t exist then, that made her a deeply committed humanist.

Read More
In Philosophy Tags Emma Goldman, Atheism, Capitalism, Socialism, Anarchism, Humanism, Philosophy
Image: Jeremy Bishop/Ling Gigi/Mark Seliger

Image: Jeremy Bishop/Ling Gigi/Mark Seliger

The Injunction of Happiness: Slavoj Žižek and Capitalist Buddhism

August 27, 2019

Buddhism in the western, capitalist context is the same kind of hollow experience that the fleshlight is for sex; it makes one feel better in the short term but doesn’t actually remedy one’s issues in the long term. In this variant, Buddhism is no more a challenger of our material conditions then right-wing Christianity. As Žižek writes, “Although Buddhism presents itself as the remedy for the stressful tension of capitalist dynamics, allowing us to uncouple and retain inner peace and Gelassenheit (self-surrender), it actually functions as capitalism’s perfect ideological supplement.” 

Read More
In Philosophy Tags Slavoj Žižek, Žižek, Slavoj Zizek, Zizek, Buddhism, Capitalism, Mindfulness, Religion
Comment

recent

Featured
Short Book Reviews: Science and Society II
Apr 16, 2025
Short Book Reviews: Science and Society II
Apr 16, 2025
Apr 16, 2025
Crypto and Financial Euphoria
Mar 17, 2025
Crypto and Financial Euphoria
Mar 17, 2025
Mar 17, 2025
Short Book Reviews: Presidential History
Feb 17, 2025
Short Book Reviews: Presidential History
Feb 17, 2025
Feb 17, 2025
Obsession and Desire: Stephen King and John Carpenter’s Christine
Jan 15, 2025
Obsession and Desire: Stephen King and John Carpenter’s Christine
Jan 15, 2025
Jan 15, 2025
Hope in the Machine: Towards a Humanistic Technology
Nov 1, 2024
Hope in the Machine: Towards a Humanistic Technology
Nov 1, 2024
Nov 1, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Politics and the American Empire
Aug 21, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Politics and the American Empire
Aug 21, 2024
Aug 21, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Rick Perlstein’s History of the American Right
Jun 17, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Rick Perlstein’s History of the American Right
Jun 17, 2024
Jun 17, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Science and Society
Jun 3, 2024
Short Book Reviews: Science and Society
Jun 3, 2024
Jun 3, 2024
In Praise of Idleness for the 21st Century
Jun 14, 2023
In Praise of Idleness for the 21st Century
Jun 14, 2023
Jun 14, 2023
Getting at the Root:  Revisiting Christopher Hitchens’ god is not Great
Jun 5, 2023
Getting at the Root: Revisiting Christopher Hitchens’ god is not Great
Jun 5, 2023
Jun 5, 2023

Powered by Squarespace