Ratings1
Average rating4.5
A smart and empowering book about the simple art of hanging out ... and of taking back our social lives from the deadening whirl of contemporary life. Almost every day it seems that our world becomes more fractured, more digital, and more chaotic. Sheila Liming has the answer: we need to hang out more. Starting with the assumption that play is to children as hanging out is to adults, Liming makes a brilliant case for the necessity of unstructured social time as a key element of our cultural vitality. The book asks questions like what is hanging out? why is it important? why do we do it? how do we do it? and examines the various ways we hang out—in groups, online, at parties, at work. Hanging Out: The Radical Power of Killing Time makes an intelligent case for the importance of this most casual of social structures, and shows us how just getting together can be a potent act of resistance all on its own.
Reviews with the most likes.
By stating the completely obvious, yet.... lost... situations that constitute hanging out, the author emphasizes what has been taken from us by the attention or lack thereof of digital media. I come away from it wanting to make connections with people in real life, and while I'm still afraid of doing so, I'm going to extend myself a lot of grace in trying, thanks to this book.