April 10, 2023

"As a theme, fatigue is so extensive, and so intrinsic to the fact of being alive, that demarcating where it begins or ends is no simple task."

"One can imagine a Borgesian fable in which a fatiguologist, bent upon covering every aspect of the topic, dies of sheer inanition with the project incomplete. The more encyclopedic the mission, the stricter the boundaries that need to be set; if you’re expecting 'A History of Fatigue' to begin with the Iliad—whose protagonists are pre-wiped, having battled for nine years before the action of the poem gets under way—you are doomed to disappointment. Nothing about the ancient world, it would seem, appeals to Vigarello. He doubtless believes that everyone back then was brimming with juice and zip, and that if Achilles harried Hector three times around the walls of Troy it’s because both guys needed the exercise."

Writes Anthony Lane, "The Exhausting History of Fatigue Having too much to do can be tiring; having nothing to do may be worse" (The New Yorker). Lane does not like the book, "A History of Fatigue" by Georges Vigarello, but I enjoyed the review, and fatigue is an interesting subject.

And I learned a word... or, at least, "inanition" seems like a new word to me. It is — according to the OED — "The action or process of emptying; the condition of being empty; spec. the exhausted condition resulting from want or insufficiency of nourishment."

I checked the 19-year history of this blog, and "inanition" did appear once. It was in a quote from... you could almost guess and have a good shot at getting it right...

12 comments:

Fred Drinkwater said...

"inanition" not mentioned here, over the life of the blog? I am rarely really surprised here, but...

And You, a law professor!

Owen said...

My guess is “inanition” came from a quote from Samuel Johnson. The word is not unfamiliar to me, along with its close relative, “inane,” which packs a lot of nothing into two punchy syllables (along with a schoolboy whiff of “anus” and “asinine”).

Narr said...

What Fred said!

Tina Trent said...

Yes,we pumped up our boys on benzos to keep them fighting, and tacitly allowed morphine and heroin to bring them down.

It makes the pathetic whinging of snowflake college protesters with "safe places" to cosset their feeling even more pathetic, doesn't it?

Lurker21 said...

I thought the word was "inaniation."

So I'm glad I never used it.

Somebody better look in on George Will.

Inanition may already have gotten him.

rhhardin said...

Levinas has a whole book on Fatigue and what it is. E.g. see page 16 Existence and Existents (pdf)

"The numbness of fatigue is its telling characteristic. It is an impossibility of following through, a constant and increasing lag between being and what it remains attached to .."

Nancy said...

That is a very common word around our household. Eg "I had better serve dinner before you perish of inanition."

Biff said...

Safire would have been my guess, but I suppose George Will makes sense.

MikeM said...

I signed out a Death Certificate, Cause of Death, as "Inanition" some years back. The individual was a lady in her 60s who hid her cancer from friends and family, "took to her bed" and refused food and drink for two weeks. I could think of no other word that fit the situation.

SteveWe said...

As my boyhood friend said about a street baseball game at dusk, I'm too pooped to participate.

Tina Trent said...

St. Thomas Aquinas has a good bit to say about this, as did Dante. I always wondered why despair (ballpark inanition) was a mortal, rather than venal sin. As I grow older, I understand it more.

Narr said...

Post has died of inanition and/or inattention.