Dear nettimers, 

I am proud to announce the publication in English of the title essay of my next 
book, Sad by Design, published by Eurozine in Vienna: 
https://www.eurozine.com/sad-by-design/ 
<https://www.eurozine.com/sad-by-design/>.

In this essay I am investigating the many dimensions of ‘technological 
sadness’. I quickly realized there are many, conflicting, emotions (as 
notorious non-Deleuzian from the Spinoza city of Amsterdam I am reluctant to 
use the phrase ‘affect’). I do not want do look at the entire world from the 
lense of sadness this or that--but it is a strong angle regardless. I hope you 
enjoy my attempt to overcome easy positions of rejection and contempt.  At INC 
we’re devoted to social media alternatives, for many years now. This political 
position, however, should not stop us from investigating the messy world as it 
is. Here a fragment. 

Best from Geert

—

"In the online context, sadness appears as a short moment of indecisiveness, a 
flash that opens up the possibility of a reflection. The frequently used ‘sad’ 
label is a vehicle, a strange attractor to enter the liquid mess called social 
media. Sadness is a container. Each and every situation can potentially be 
qualified as ‘sad’. Through this mild form of suffering, we enter the blues of 
being in the world. When something’s sad, things around it become grey. You 
trust the machine because you feel you’re in control of it. You want to go from 
zero to hero. But then your propped-up ego implodes and the failure of 
self-esteem becomes apparent again. The price of self-control in an age of 
instant gratification is high. We long to revolt against the restless zombie 
inside us, but we don’t know how. Our psychic armour is thin and eroded from 
within, open to ‘behavioural modifications’. Sadness arises at the point we’re 
exhausted by the online world. After yet another app session in which we failed 
to make a date, purchased a ticket and did a quick round of videos, the 
post-dopamine mood hits us hard. The sheer busyness and self-importance of the 
world makes you feel joyless. After a dive into the network we’re drained and 
feel socially awkward. The swiping finger is tired and we have to stop."

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