What idleness, leisure, and free time have in common is that they are the opposite of labor; all three are linked with the cessation or interruption of labor. The article takes Kazimir Malevich’s provocative essay Laziness as the Truth of Mankind (1921) as the starting point for an examination of the complex and fraught issue of the balance between idleness and labor. Malevich redefines idleness as grace, as the point of labor and its peer, and as something that is not only a release from hard labor but that also leads to peace and God. The author proposes a reading of Malevich’s apologetics of idleness in juxtaposition with Marx’s early focus on the issues of human freedom and on alleviating alienation in a newly arranged society, and with Paul Lafargue’s argument that workers would do better to fight for the right to be idle than for the right to work. The comparison with Marx and Lafargue reveals a fundamental flaw in their socialist program of heroic labor, which preserved the exploitation of labor but ha
Original languageRussian
Pages (from-to)259-272
Number of pages14
JournalLogos (Russian Federation)
Volume29
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019

    Scopus subject areas

  • Cultural Studies
  • Philosophy
  • Literature and Literary Theory

    Research areas

  • alienation, Giorgio Agamben, idleness, Kazimir Malevich, laziness, Paul Lafargue, Джорджо Агамбен, Казимир Малевич, лень, отчуждение, Поль Лафарг, труд

ID: 48485834