Byung-Chul Han

Story Stream

The Winter of Civilization March 03, 2025

I came across Byung-Chul Han towards the end of the previous decade, while writing a book about the pleasures and discontents of inactivity. My first researches into our culture of overwork and perpetual stimulation soon turned up Han’s The Burnout S...

The Business—and Politics—of Storytelling August 26, 2024

Byung-Chul Han is one of most popular figures in contemporary German philosophy. More a derivative than an original thinker, he applies ideas of Martin Heidegger, Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, etc., to such facets of modern life as professional bur...

Signifying Nothing: Against Byung-Chul Han April 30, 2024

Just as political language both describes and expresses political forces, every public intellectual is both a doctor and a patient in the mental hospital of contemporary life. Defined against each other as products in a cornered market, each combines...

The Internet’s New Favorite Philosopher April 19, 2024

“The power to change one’s life comes from a paragraph, a lone remark,” James Salter wrote in his 1975 novel, “Light Years.” An encounter with a single “slender” line of writing, as he put it, can send a reader spinning off on a new trajectory; her l...

Phono Sapiens April 15, 2024

My friend J, a computer programmer, once convinced his former roommate—also a programmer—to watch the Japanese art film Asako I & II, about a woman who falls in love with two identical-looking but different men. J’s roommate sat patiently through thi...

The Disenchantment of the World March 22, 2024

The children’s author Paul Maar tells the story of a boy who cannot tell stories. When his little sister, Susanne, is struggling to fall asleep, tossing and turning in her bed, she asks Konrad to tell her a story. He declines in a huff. Konrad’s pare...

Surviving Hyperculture May 04, 2023

The following is a condensed version of "Surviving Hyperculture" by Emina Melonic, published at Law & Liberty. Does the term “culture” even mean anything, given humanity’s turn away from particularity and toward a more fluid world of never-ending cha...

Surviving Hyperculture April 24, 2023

Philosopher Byung-Chul Han is known for his treatise-like reflections on modern life. Combining philosophical inquiry with cultural critique, Han objectively delineates and clarifies modern society’s existential ailments, while trying to discern wher...