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Audio 32

Biao Xiang on Lonely Deaths, Involution, and the Disappearance of the Nearby
Lesunge   
Loneliness is no longer a luxury problem for philosophers and artists. Anthropologist Biao Xiang discusses how it became a mass condition and what gossip, Hannah Arendt, and hummingbirds reveal about a way out of this crisis.
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10 Juni 2026 Anhören Weniger

Audio 32

Lauren Oyler talks with anthropologist Biao Xiang, director of the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology. His concepts of “suspension,” “involution,” and “the disappearance of the nearby” have gone mainstream with a whole generation of young people in China.

Lauren and Biao Xiang discuss how loneliness, a condition once considered a luxury problem for artists or philosophers, has now become widespread, reaching even those who are surrounded by others, like young people and members of the working class.

They also discuss the role of AI and neo-liberalism in loneliness, the loss of pride in the working class and why gossip is important to the social fabric. They close with Hannah Arendt’s distinction between loneliness and solitude and a conversation on lonely deaths in Germany and Japan.

Read “Dying Alone,” the essay on lonely deaths at https://blnreview.de/en/ausgaben/2026-05/dying-alone-lonely-deaths-germany-japan

Subscribe to Berlin Review — essays, criticism, and fiction from around the world. From €5/month: https://blnreview.de/en/subscribe

Airlift is produced in the Studio of Jacobin Germany. Hosted by Lauren Oyler and Tobias Haberkorn.

Veröffentlicht am 10 Juni 2026