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Josh Cohen's Top Book Recommendations

Want to know what books Josh Cohen recommends on their reading list? We've researched interviews, social media posts, podcasts, and articles to build a comprehensive list of Josh Cohen's favorite book recommendations of all time.

1

Against Nature

With a title translated either as Against Nature or as Against The Grain, this wildly original fin-de-siècle novel follows its sole character, Des Esseintes, a decadent, ailing aristocrat who retreats to an isolated villa where he indulges his taste for luxury and excess. Veering between nervous excitability and debilitating ennui, he gluts his aesthetic appetites with classical literature and art, exotic jewels (with which he fatally encrusts the shell of his tortoise), rich perfumes, and a kaleidoscope of sensual experiences. The original handbook of decadence, Against... more
Recommended by Josh Cohen, and 1 others.

Josh CohenThe novel portrays brilliantly all the paradoxes and tortures of what we now call burnout—arguably more accurately than any nonfictional treatment. Hysterically funny. (Source)

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2

Non Stop Inertia

Recommended by Josh Cohen, and 1 others.

Josh CohenOne of the pithiest and most powerful descriptions of the political economy of inertia. Southwood really anatomises the new culture of the workplace that ties the precarity of finding work and keeping work to this culture of enforced positive thinking and action. That’s what he’s describing as ‘non-stop inertia,’ because you feel like you’re never really getting anywhere. (Source)

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3

Exhaustion

A History

Today our fatigue feels chronic; our anxieties, amplified. Proliferating technologies command our attention. Many people complain of burnout, and economic instability and the threat of ecological catastrophe fill us with dread. We look to the past, imagining life to have once been simpler and slower, but extreme mental and physical stress is not a modern syndrome. Beginning in classical antiquity, this book demonstrates how exhaustion has always been with us and helps us evaluate more critically the narratives we tell ourselves about the phenomenon.

Medical, cultural, literary, and...
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Recommended by Josh Cohen, and 1 others.

Josh CohenIf you’re interested in the genealogy of our present malaise, then Schaffner’s book is really interesting. She reminds us of how variegated a phenomenon exhaustion is. That it has a relationship to the physical, the mental, the social… it registers at so many different levels of life, from the intensely personal to the intensely public. (Source)

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4

Hikikomori

Adolescence without End


This is the first English translation of a controversial Japanese best seller that made the public aware of the social problem of hikikomori, or “withdrawal”—a phenomenon estimated by the author to involve as many as one million Japanese adolescents and young adults who have withdrawn from society, retreating to their rooms for months or years and severing almost all ties to the outside world. Saitō Tamaki’s work of popular psychology provoked a national debate about the causes and extent of the condition.


Since Hikikomori was published in Japan in 1998,...
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Recommended by Josh Cohen, and 1 others.

Josh CohenA very lucid, clinical account of a hidden social phenomenon that the author, Saitō Tamaki—a psychoanalytically sympathetic psychiatrist—was the first to identify in Japan as hikikomori, literally ‘social withdrawal.' (Source)

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5
Depression, once a subfield of neurosis, has become the most diagnosed mental disorder in the world. Why and how has depression become such a topical illness and what does it tell us about changing ideas of the individual and society? Alain Ehrenberg investigates the history of depression and depressive symptoms across twentieth-century psychiatry, showing that identifying depression is far more difficult than a simple diagnostic distinction between normal and pathological sadness - the one constant in the history of depression is its changing definition. Drawing on the accumulated knowledge... more
Recommended by Josh Cohen, and 1 others.

Josh CohenIt gives us a very detailed and rich picture of the clinical symptomatology of burnout. But more interestingly, I think, it gives us a psychosocial understanding of the social conditions of the possibility for burnout. (Source)

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