Boredom

Dolce far Niente by Auguste Toulmouche, 1876.





Dolce far Niente by Auguste Toulmouche, 1876.













Boredom is the modern mood.

Our world seems to flit back and forth between excessive stimulation and extreme boredom. We have at our fingertips perpetual entertainment, and yet we find ourselves existentially adrift, listless, vacant. Is this boredom unique to our times? Or is it only another epoch in the long lineage of restless humanity?

In today’s episode, with boredom expert Dr. Rebekah Lamb, we explore the social, literary, and spiritual dimensions of boredom, and what it looks like to turn our boredom into something fruitful and wholesome, rather than destructive and inert.

If you enjoy listening to this podcast half as much as I enjoyed recording it, I know you’ll be delighted. :)











Screen Shot 2019-05-21 at 12.26.42.png













Dr Rebekah Lamb is Lecturer in Theology, Imagination and the Arts. Her research interests span from Victorian period to the present; the Pre-Raphaelites and their affiliate circles; medieval revivalism; affect theory (particularly boredom studies); interfaces between theology and film studies, journalism, and social media; Christian personalism, education, and liturgy.

While preparing this podcast, I amused myself by googling pictures to do with boredom. The result was very pleasing. Please enjoy this melange of apathetic women…









flowers8.jpg













No, no… everything you’re saying is extremely interesting… Do go on…









flowers15.jpg













So bored she can’t even be bothered to sit up…









flowers14.jpg













Not even this novel can save me from ennui…









bored.jpg













Perhaps boredom could lead you to solve crimes! See: it’s not all bad!!Further Reading…
















By Dom Jean-Charles Nault O.S.B.





















Experience Without Qualities: Boredom and Modernity

By Elizabeth S. Goodstein





















Leisure: The Basis of Culture

By Josef Pieper





















The Power of Silence: Against the Dictatorship of Noise

By Cardinal Robert Sarah





















Vile Bodies

By Evelyn Waugh






Rebekah mentioned this book about the “Bright Young Things” wiling away their boredom destructively…














Bleak House (Wordsworth Classics)

By Charles Dickens






One of my favourite Dickens novels. Includes the exquisitely bored Lady Dedlock.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 21, 2019 04:58
No comments have been added yet.


Joy Marie Clarkson's Blog

Joy Marie Clarkson
Joy Marie Clarkson isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Joy Marie Clarkson's blog with rss.