"In our clickbait-saturated digital media environment, everything from online shopping to binge-watching TV series is routinely framed as 'escapist' and bemoaned as distracting everyone from much more important matters. By probing the material conditions that billions of people are wilfully trying to escape from and illuminating the psychological needs met by the myriad cultural practices frequently lambasted as 'escapist', Greg Sharzers Late Escapism advances a deft and dialectical study of the social determinations of contemporary escapism. Sharzers stylishly written book brings together salient currents in political economy and cultural studies to forge a novel and interdisciplinary social theory of escapism. By explaining its popularity through the contradictions of neoliberal capitalism, the fantasies of the Left-Right culture war, and the coping strategies of the working class, the book convincingly argues that escapism matters as a new field of inquiry and site of politics. Even better, it finds some resources for emancipatory hope in the everyday practices of escapism."
Tanner Mirrlees, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada
"Escapism fleeing reality or routine is a central experience of our lives, especially work lives. This masterful work explains the causes and uses of escapism drawing from a vast literature and using examples, including contemporary culture. Sharzer seeks to define a new field of scholarly research escapism studies and succeeds in doing so. A must read!"
Thomas Klassen, York University, Canada
"Late Escapism marks an important intervention in the cultural study of late capitalism. Sharzer moves beyond unhelpful distinctions between reality and fantasy, and resolutely defends escapism as a form of resistance and revolutionary imagining."
James Cairns, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada
"Sharzer's work is firmly 'of the left', but it also consistently unpicks lazy leftist assumptions, in order to travel towards a more practical and robust understanding of the world and its issues. Here, he tackles the seemingly default left-wing aversion to leisure and escape as a possible utopian space. Sharzer always tries to cut new routes through the mud of congealed thought, and here he makes new paths, which are connected to his earlier work on localism. Whether you agree with him or not is far from the point, that he makes you re-think the issues for yourself always is."
Steve Hanson, Co-Editor, Manchester Review of Books