According to Socrates, “An unexamined life is not worth
living,” and that quote ostensibly served as the inspiration for
this documentary deeply exploring the mindset underpinning
American culture. To that end, this readily-accessible discourse
on philosophy relies on the novel insights of nine leading
academics, beginning and ending with Princeton Professor Dr.
Cornel West [pictured below].
West was interviewed in Manhattan on his way to Penn Station
while sitting in the back of a car being driven by director
Astra Taylor. He wonders aloud about “What happens when you
begin to call into question your tacit assumptions and
unarticulated presumptions,” suggesting that you begin to become
a different person. He goes on to talk about the challenge to
survive in this society in the face of a “patriarchy, white
supremacy, imperialism and state power,” and “a structure of
domination not accountable to the people affected by it.”
Another
Princeton Professor, ethicist Peter Singer [pictured right], is
shot strolling along Fifth Avenue in front of some of the most
expensive stores in the world, like Bergdorf Goodman. There, in
the midst of unalloyed decadence, he indicts conspicuous
consumption by suggesting that we have a moral obligation not
merely to do no harm but to help reduce “the amount of
unnecessary pain and suffering in the world.”
Other subjects weighing-in include Berkeley feminist Judith
Butler, Duke’s anti-corporate firebrand Michael Hardt,
University of Chicago’s Law Professor Martha Nussbaum, avuncular
NYU deconstructionist Avital Ronell, disabled artist Sunaura
Taylor, Princeton’s cosmopolitan Kwame Anthony Appiah and
cultural critic Slavoj Žižek, the subject of Ms. Taylor’s first
film.
Endlessly thought-provoking at every turn, Examined Life
offers a transcendental experience which amounts to the most
satisfying cinematic experience of 2009 thus far.
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A trailer for Examined Life