martattack reviewed Post-Growth Living by Kate Soper
Review of 'Post-Growth Living' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
I 100% purchased this book without knowing anything about it - the term "alternative hedonism" had me the moment it entered my brain. And yes the concept is as sexy as its name!!!
Turns out I was an alternative hedonist in many ways and didn't even know it - thus I vibed very hard with what the author proposes: an improved (ethically and environmentally) future society must rely on finding sensual pleasure from a non-consumeristic lifestyle, i.e. working less, slow(er) living, or new production and consumption standards.
There's a LOT of information on this book to develop this argument, and now writing this I'm honestly finding it hard to make sense of it all. This book pairs very well with the whole degrowth movement, and I guess it just makes a case for how degrowth could "stick": if people actually found non-growth based activities pleasurable rather than "going back to …
I 100% purchased this book without knowing anything about it - the term "alternative hedonism" had me the moment it entered my brain. And yes the concept is as sexy as its name!!!
Turns out I was an alternative hedonist in many ways and didn't even know it - thus I vibed very hard with what the author proposes: an improved (ethically and environmentally) future society must rely on finding sensual pleasure from a non-consumeristic lifestyle, i.e. working less, slow(er) living, or new production and consumption standards.
There's a LOT of information on this book to develop this argument, and now writing this I'm honestly finding it hard to make sense of it all. This book pairs very well with the whole degrowth movement, and I guess it just makes a case for how degrowth could "stick": if people actually found non-growth based activities pleasurable rather than "going back to stone age" or whatever people say when talking about degrowth.
At the beginning of reading I was all like yassss get it! By the middle I was like wow this is a lot of info. And by the end she does a whole chapter of actual political measures that could be taken to promote this which is nice (but doesn't go too much into detail tbh!). But yes, very very nice food for thought, do read it if you're into degrowth!