No More Heroes, Please
On the erosion of heroism and the poverty of language From David Bowie to the Foo Fighters , from The Stranglers to countless others, popular culture keeps returning to the same figure: the hero. Songs, films, books — too many to count. We appear obsessed with heroism. Which raises an uncomfortable question: do we truly understand what it means, or are we simply in love with the idea of it? What makes a soldier throw himself on top of a grenade, absorbing a blast that would otherwise kill an entire platoon? What makes a fireman run into a burning building, on the brink of collapse, to rescue a resident while fully aware it might cost him his own life? What makes a passer-by jump into an icy, wild river to save a drowning child? Why do some people overcome their most primal instinct — the fear of dying — in order to save others? Is it a split-second decision, a momentary lapse of reason? Or something closer to standing at the edge of an abyss and feeling the urge to jump? We tend...