What remains of the self when the system teaches us to live as reflections of its own machinery?
Alienation is not merely a philosophical idea; it is the silent tragedy of modern existence. Béla Tarr’s Sátántangó captures this condition with haunting precision: a gray, rain-drenched landscape where people drift between illusion and reality, freedom and submission, presence and absence.
This book reads Sátántangó as a sociological mirror of alienation, revealing how economic systems, so ...