1st Edition

Comfort and Contemporary Culture The problems of the ‘good life’ on an increasingly uncomfortable planet

By Andrew Hickey Copyright 2024
174 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

174 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

174 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

To be comfortable stands as an aspiration of the times; to be comfortable defines what it means to live ‘the good life’. We talk about such things as maintaining a comfortable home, a comfortable lifestyle and a comfortable retirement. We seek out comforts in the relationships we sustain, the leisure practices we enact and the possessions we accumulate. We look for promises of comfort... Read more

Section 1 The Condition of Comfort 1. Comfort, where? The Dimensions of Comfort 2. Situating the Argument 3. The Narrative Construction of Comfort 4. But Again; Comfort? Some Final, Initial, Notes Section 2 Permutations of Comfort: A Pragmatic Consideration of Comfort’s Surfacings 5. Upon Booking the Flight: The Physiographies of Comfort 6. A Trip to the Shops: Comfort’s Ethical Recognition 7. A Visit to the Oncology Ward: Comfort as an Observable State of Being 8. In the Living Room: The Securitization of Comfort Section 3 Permeations of Comfort: A Further Consideration of Comfort’s effects 9. Comfort’s Individualisation: The Cruel Optimism of Comfort 10. Afflict the Comfortable, Comfort the Afflicted: Comfort and the Reformation of the ‘Good Life’

Biography

Andrew T Hickey is Professor of Communications in the School of Humanities and Communication, University of Southern Queensland.