We live in an era drowning in noise—where every moment must be captured, curated, and broadcast. But beneath the endless scroll lies a quiet crisis: the erosion of the authentic self.
In Loud Narcissism: The Erosion of Self in the Age of Digital Performance, Mowaffaq S. AlKayyali dissects the modern condition we all recognize but rarely name. What was once private vanity has become a global spectacle. The bedroom mirror has expanded into a worldwide stage of pixels, algorithms, and likes. We no longer live experiences; we perform them.
This book is a philosophical journey through the digital carnival:
- The anxiety of the red notification dot that has replaced true patience.
- The paradox of being seen by thousands yet truly known by no one.
- Irony as the ultimate shield against sincerity.
- The prison of permanent digital archives that rob us of forgetting and forgiveness.
- The haunting illusion of digital immortality and the spectacle of grief turned content.
Through haunting stories, real-life examples, and insights from thinkers like Baudrillard, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard, AlKayyali reveals how we trade depth for visibility, intimacy for engagement, and presence for performance.
But this is not despair—it is a call to quiet rebellion.
Reclaim the void between notifications. Rediscover the face behind the screen. Step away from the glass palace and return to the flawed, silent, beautiful reality of being human.
If you're tired of the performance, exhausted by the need to be "loud," and ready to listen to your own unfiltered heart—this book is your guide back to yourself.
Welcome to the resistance. Welcome back to the real.
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