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Authenticity in Crisis: The impossibility of being oneself under the gaze of the other
Indigo
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Authenticity in Crisis: The impossibility of being oneself under the gaze of the other
By None
Current price: $6.77


By None
Authenticity in Crisis: The impossibility of being oneself under the gaze of the other
Current price: $6.77
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
In a time when everything must appear genuine, even authenticity has become performance. The individual, urged to express emotional consistency, personal style, and narrative coherence, finds themselves trapped in the duty to “be yourself”—even when that self no longer fits. This work unfolds as a philosophical reflection on inner exposure, the normalization of sensitivity, and the exhaustion of maintaining a stable identity. Between the aesthetics of sincerity and the marketing of the self, a quiet question arises: how can one continue to exist without having to perform?
Figures such as Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Montaigne, Simone Weil, Foucault, Sartre, and Byung-Chul Han appear not as authorities, but as thinking presences. Authenticity is not recovered here — it is undone. And in that undoing, another form of presence may emerge — one less functional, less legible, more truthful.
In a time when everything must appear genuine, even authenticity has become performance. The individual, urged to express emotional consistency, personal style, and narrative coherence, finds themselves trapped in the duty to “be yourself”—even when that self no longer fits. This work unfolds as a philosophical reflection on inner exposure, the normalization of sensitivity, and the exhaustion of maintaining a stable identity. Between the aesthetics of sincerity and the marketing of the self, a quiet question arises: how can one continue to exist without having to perform?
Figures such as Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Montaigne, Simone Weil, Foucault, Sartre, and Byung-Chul Han appear not as authorities, but as thinking presences. Authenticity is not recovered here — it is undone. And in that undoing, another form of presence may emerge — one less functional, less legible, more truthful.


















