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The fascinating history of boredom: ϲ expert

Boredom has historically been an emotion both viewed as an enemy and embraced for its possibilities (photo via Shutterstock)

“I’m bored” is a statement many .

Should parents scramble to fill the unstructured time of summer for their kids – so they don’t complain of nothing to do (or worse, get into trouble)? Or should they allow children time, perhaps, to be bored?

Indeed, today, the popular idea exists, advanced by psychologists, management experts or innovators, that and . Boredom is not just viewed as something to be avoided, but also something to be actively cultivated for its potential.

Scholars link the emergence of the term boredom .

Regulating time . Since at least the 17th century, western political, legal and religious authorities emphasized the need to use

My study focuses on boredom in Canada following the Second World War into the 1980s. I examine boredom in relation to discussions of capitalism, productivity and emotional regulation, along with historical understandings of the emotion as both negative and positive.

In the period I’m studying, cultural and academic discussions and commentary about boredom popped up in a variety of contexts pertaining to different populations and social groups.

Is boredom something to be avoided? (photo via Shutterstock)

Postwar Canada boredom

Historian Shirley Tillotson, professor emerita at University of King’s College, chronicles how during the mid-20th century in Canada, in response to advocacy responding to poor labour conditions, .

But through the late 1950s until the 1970s, and might lead to increased boredom. Cultural discussions of the dangers of boredom drew on longer-standing political, legal and religious debates grounded in middle-class views of moral behaviour related to .

In the postwar period, men and women returned from their respective war roles and back into routines changed through processes of automation or new technologies, both in jobs . In the early 60s, advice columnists wrote about boredom in marriage in papers like the Winnipeg Tribune. Many of these columns dealt with the particular .

Concerns surrounding boredom in marriage reflected , which entailed a focus on rigid gender roles, white middle-class sensibilities and worries about youth deviancy and delinquency. In my preliminary research I’ve found that in the postwar years and beyond, media and cultural commentary in Canada reflected :

Yet some also fretted that while leisure time could breed boredom, . Since the early 20th century, psychologists and management experts have been interested in , and have studied the relationship between boredom, work and personality.

Radical boredom

Though less common, western thinkers have also explored boredom as something potentially positive.

In his 1924 essay on boredom, the German writer Siegfried Kracauer presents two . Kracauer was a who is sometimes associated with , a group of intellectuals who addressed modernity, culture and capitalist society.

Kracauer wrote as a response to social changes brought about by industrial modernity, including repetitive factory work, increased technologization and the emergence of mass advertising. He suggests one form of boredom is related to the drudgery of everyday modern life, and a hollowing out of a person’s subjectivity.

The other form of boredom Kracauer discusses – what he calls true or radical boredom – is linked to quiet leisure time where one might recognize the bombardments and oppressions of modern life. Kracauer sees this second form of boredom as a site of radical political potential.

This sense of boredom as a site of potential for change or inspired action also has roots in the western intellectual tradition. In the Renaissance and Romantic periods, as a form of discontent linked to intelligence and creativity that they associated with the sensibilities of poets and philosophers.

If we consider the desire to regulate boredom – the need to avoid or eradicate it – in light of Kracauer’s notion of radical boredom, we might speculate that part of the desire to regulate the emotion is linked to anxieties surrounding what boredom might lead to.

Indeed, one of the reasons industrial psychologists during the early-20th century saw boredom as a problem was because it might result in labour unrest: .

If boredom is also a site of potential, perhaps it needn’t be so dreaded.

These final weeks of summertime might be a chance to let , to explore what might emerge.

But heads up, there could be trouble for the parent – or proposed changes to daily family life and routines.

 is a PhD student in the department of history at the .

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

 

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