JF and Phil have been talking about doing a show on The Glass Bead Game since Weird Studies' earliest beginnings. It is a science-fiction novel that alights on some of the key ideas that run through the podcast: the dichotomy of work and play, the limits and affordances of institutional life, the obscure boundary where certainty gives way to mystery... Throughout his literary career, Hesse wrote about people trying to square their inner and outer selves, their life in the spirit and their life in the world. The Glass Bead Game brings this central concern to a properly ambiguous and heartbreaking conclusion. But the novel is more than a brilliant work of philosophical or psychological literature. It is also an act of prophecy -- one that seems intended for us now.

Header image by Liz West, via Wikimedia Commons.

REFERENCES

Herman Hesse, The Glass Bead Game

Paul Hindemith, German composer

Morris Berman, The Twilight of American Culture

Alfred Korzybski, concept of Time Binding

Christopher Nolan, Memento

William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light

Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain

David Tracy, The Analogical Imagination: Christian Theology and the Culture of Pluralism

Jeremy Johnson, Seeing Through the World: Jean Gebser and Integral Consciousness

Teilhard de Chardin, French theologian

Mathesis

Joshua Ramey, The Hermetic Deleuze

Weird Studies, Episode 22 with Joshua Ramey

Joseph Needham, British historian of Chinese culture

James Carse, Finite and Infinite Games

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