Fast Capitalism
Abstract
In his 1949 work Hamlet's Ghost, Richard Flatter wrote of the ghost of Hamlet's father that the play ultimately belongs to him, to the ghost. Modernity, like the play, belongs to its ghosts, to its dead fathers haunting their wayward sons, the metaphysical specters it imperfectly endeavors to exorcise. Critical theory has often focused on the possibility, and the contours, of a utopia populated by liberatory spirit and liberated persons. Less well explored, however, are the implications for tradition, religion, and the transmission of culture at a metaphorical echelon—those ostensibly "pre-modern" ideas which the broader project of Enlightenment liberalism never fully leaves behind. Drawing upon thinkers as diverse as Marcuse, Derrida, Weber, and Nietzsche, I read Shakespeare's Hamlet, particularly the interaction between the ghost of the father and his vacillating son, as a metaphor for the failure to achieve a sought-after post-metaphysical world, and the ominous potential that inheres in the resulting ambivalence. The implications of these philosophical and sociohistorical developments are centered around the social psychological emergence of a modern self, at once alienated from history and nature, but perhaps able to re-imagine selfhood from "outside the iron cage."
Author Biography
Lukas Szrot, University of Kansas
Lukas Szrot is currently an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Bemidji State University. His dissertation research, completed in the spring of 2019, examined how the relationship between religious identity and environmental concern has changed over time in the United States. Szrot has a long-standing interest in how ethical and cultural shifts occur around environmental issues and beliefs about "nature," but has also written, and conducted research on, the social psychology of belief, the relationship between publics and experts in democracies, and methodological issues in the social sciences. He can be reached at lukas.szrot@bemidjistate.edu
Recommended Citation
Szrot, Lukas
(2019)
"Hamlet's Father: Hauntology and the Roots of the Modern Self,"
Fast Capitalism: Vol. 16:
Iss.
2, Article 12.
DOI: 10.32855/1930-014X.1274
Available at:
https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/fastcapitalism/vol16/iss2/12