Episode 209: Nostalgia

“Nostalgia” is a portmanteau coined in 1688 by Johannes Hofer, combining the Greek nostros (homecoming) and algos (pain, ache).  Hofer was a medical student, and he invented this term to describe a kind of melancholia, a somewhat depressive state–- and so, from its inception, “nostalgia” was viewed as a mood disorder.  For the Romantics, it was a sentimentality for the past, the good old days of yore, combining the sadness of loss with a joy that that loss is not complete or total. Nostalgia is often paradoxical, because the past we long for and re-member is a past that was never present.  If it is a “homecoming,” what one discovers in returning home, as Odysseus does, is that there is no “there” there. 

Nostalgia is also unheimlich (“unhomely”) or more accurately, “uncanny.”  It always involves a manner of self-deception about what was by distorting or idealizing the past. This can often have negative, even dangerous consequences: individually, socially, and politically. Much more than just a “mood,” nostalgia is a vector of philosophical investigation par excellence that opens onto a wide range of themes: memory, time, the hermeneutics of personal identity, and even reality itself.  

So, pour a drink, and let’s see what might be problematic about what we “fondly remember”!

This week’s jukebox picks:

In this episode, we reference the following thinkers, texts, ideas, etc:

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