Nichts tun: Die Kunst, sich der Aufmerksamkeitsökonomie zu entziehen

296 pages

German language

Published 2021 by C.H. Beck.

ISBN:
978-3-406-76831-6
Copied ISBN!
Goodreads:
57377034

View on Inventaire

(8 reviews)

Wir leben inmitten einer kapitalistischen Aufmerksamkeitsökonomie, die unsere Sinne und unser politisches Bewusstsein verkümmern lässt. «Nichts tun» ist der wohlüberlegte Aufruf, unser Leben fernab von Effizienzdenken und Selbstoptimierung zurückzuerobern. Ein provokatives, zeitgemäßes und glänzend geschriebenes Buch, das die Leser:innen aufrütteln wird. Unsere Aufmerksamkeit stellt die wertvollste Ressource dar, über die wir verfügen. Im Effektgewitter kommerzieller Internetplattformen wie Facebook, Twitter, Instagram oder TikTok wird sie jedoch permanent überspannt. Jenny Odell plädiert in ihrem Buch auf eindrückliche Weise für ein radikales Innehalten, statt unsere kostbare Freizeit weiter an die kurzfristigen Verlockungen der Aufmerksamkeitsökonomie zu verschwenden. Nur über bewusste Formen des Nichtstuns finden wir heute noch zu uns selbst: etwa wenn wir uns phasenweise wieder in unsere natürliche Umgebung zurückzuziehen lernen, die Kunst der Naturbeobachtung kultivieren und authentische Begegnungen mit anderen zulassen. Odell versteht ihre Anleitung zum Nichtstun gleichsam als Akt des politischen Widerstands, um der notorischen Selbst- und Naturzerstörung im Kapitalismus etwas …

3 editions

Ehhh...

This is really just okay. I got excited at first at the beginning when she mentioned being from the Bay Area and growing up in a similar environment to what I did (parents working in tech, growing up in strip mall suburbia in the South Bay), but overall I just wasn't impressed with the arguments made or the examples of how one should "resist the attention economy." It felt deeply individualistic--very "well just use your willpower to put your phone down and touch grass sometimes!" Reading this in 2025, with knowledge about things like dark patterns, the degree to which our behavior is constantly tracked (and, arguably, in some ways even predetermined by tech algorithms), the ways this information is being utilized to cause real harm and violence on a mass scale... it just didn't hit.

I did appreciate the degree of historical grounding re: things like the hippie communes …

Lots of neat quotes and digressions; little coherent argument

Am disappointed by Odell's How to do Nothing—at least Odell's part—as it is, at its core, a self-hating self-help book about paying attention, which she has Katamari'd through some interesting stuff by other authors.

The book seems an earnest project that, well, starts as if to address material and political circumstances—but doesn't, and instead champions a vague programme of paying attention better (and that, if you don't, you don't have access to a true and full human experience).

Like, it's not dissimilar to Flow. Except that it's wearing a lot of stuff from Thoreau, Buber, Solnit, Ehrenrich and mentions some cool art installations.

reviewed How to Do Nothing by Jenny Odell

Not about doing nothing?

The main thesis is against consumerism, optimization, productivity and utility. Intentionally or not, my experience of the book embodied those principles: most of the times I was lost in thought or had already forgotten what the original argumentative line was; I was strolling around an unkept park of ideas. I wasn't expecting so much of the book to focus on the praise of specific artists, the blessings of bird watching, and Oakland.

A lot of the commentary is written like in-the-weeds literary criticism, which I think is a bit unapproachable for people not used to speaking in highly abstract concepts and so many analogies, metaphors and metonymies. Not a book for me, I guess maybe because I need some prior "manifest dismantling" of my ideals on how books ought to be written.

Review of 'How To Do Nothing: Resisting the Attention Economy' on 'Goodreads'

I wish I could make everyone read this book. It’s just so damn good and very powerful.

It’s short. Please read it. I’ll be revisiting sections of this probably for the rest of my life. And also reading this has ballooned my “to read” pile immensely.

Doing Nothing is a Lot of Work

A fantastic work of cultural critique with some deep ecology thrown in to fill the void where apps used to be. It gets a little unfocused near the end, but the fist 75% is so good. It provides an excellent overview on generative refusal, amateur ecology, and community connectedness presented from the point of view of a tech enthusiast turned bird-watcher.

avatar for Mignon

rated it

avatar for pootriarch

rated it