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Before the Story Speaks: Narrative, Attention, and the Unmaking of the Shared World - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
32 minutes
2 hours ago
Before the Story Speaks: Narrative, Attention, and the Unmaking of the Shared World - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
Before the Story Speaks: Narrative, Attention, and the Unmaking of the Shared World
The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digitally narrated.
For those drawn to the fragility of reality, the ethics of attention, and the quiet violence of stories told at scale.
#Narrative #MediaTheory #Attention #GuyDebord #JoanDidion #BernardStiegler #ByungChulHan #FrancoBerardi #MarkFisher
What happens when the stories that once helped us live begin to arrive faster than we can inhabit them? In this episode, we explore a world where the inner narrator is no longer entirely our own, where algorithmic feeds and fractured media turn experience into a continuous stream of pre-shaped scenes. Taking our cue from Joan Didion’s insight that we tell ourselves stories in order to live, we ask what it means when those stories are increasingly told to us, at a pace set by machines rather than by minds.
Through the lens of contemporary media theory and critical philosophy, we trace how the spectacle described by Guy Debord, the attention crisis diagnosed by Bernard Stiegler, and the exhaustion mapped by Byung-Chul Han and Franco Berardi converge in a single lived condition: a mind trying to make sense in an environment where narrative, data, and crisis arrive too quickly to integrate. Along the way, we sit with Mark Fisher’s sense of trapped imagination and ask how stories might be reclaimed rather than merely consumed.
This is not a simple critique of “fake news” or echo chambers. It is a phenomenology of what it feels like when the shared world loosens: when our devices deliver incompatible realities to people sitting in the same room; when collapse appears first as a genre before it arrives as consequence; when the self is read as a dataset rather than a story. We follow this arc from the drift of the inner voice, through the fragmentation of the hearth and the war of incompatible maps, to a quieter rediscovery of the local and the discipline of silence as a way of resisting narrative extraction.
Reflections
This episode traces how narrative, attention, and infrastructure interact to shape what feels real, what feels possible, and what remains thinkable.
Here are some of the reflections that surfaced along the way:
The voice in our head increasingly sounds like a place we have scrolled, not a place we have lived.
We do not live in one story, but in a glut of genres competing to claim our reality.
Collapse often reaches us first as content, only later as consequence.
When every person receives a different world through their screen, disagreement shifts from opinion to ontology.
The self begins to feel less like a character and more like a profile being continuously updated elsewhere.
Exhaustion is not just emotional; it is structural, arising when meaning must form at a speed it cannot survive.
The local is not a retreat from seriousness; it is the smallest scale at which truth and action can touch.
Silence can be an act of care for perception, a refusal to turn every moment into material.
Resisting capture does not always mean saying more; sometimes it means letting reality arrive before the story speaks.
Why Listen?
Reconsider what it means to have “your own thoughts” in an age of predictive feeds and ambient narration.
Explore how the spectacle described by Debord mutates when collapse itself becomes a content category.
Engage with the attention politics of Stiegler and the burnout and overload mapped by Han and Berardi.
Consider how Fisher’s sense of constrained imagination plays out in our narrative and media ecosystems.
Reflect on concrete practices for reclaiming scale, from tending to the local to cultivating silence as a form of perceptual repair.
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Bibliography
Debord, Guy. The Society of the Spectacle. New York: Zone Books, 1994.
Didion, Joan. The White Album. N
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
https://thedeeperthinkingpodcast.podbean.com/