
What if, instead of trying to control everything, we learned how to live well with what won’t change? The Art of Positive Fatalism follows young musicians in Kinshasa who create, rehearse and perform in conditions of permanent crisis, and from their lives Lukas Pairon distils a powerful idea: “positive fatalism”, the capacity to accept hard limits without giving up agency, joy or dignity. Through years of fieldwork with street ensembles like Beta Mbonda, he shows how people keep projects, relationships and meaning alive when money is absent, infrastructures fail and tomorrow is never guaranteed, without romanticizing their struggle or turning “resilience” into a slogan.
Framed by a foreword from Hartmut Rosa and Olivier Hamant and postcripts by Congolese thinkers Manda Tchebwa and Philémon Mukendi, this book bridges vivid narrative and sharp theory to speak to readers interested in Africa, music, social practice, philosophy, education and mental health. It’s an ideal e-book for underlining, screenshotting and sharing: a thought-provoking read for anyone feeling overwhelmed by acceleration and burnout, looking for another way to stay present, protect what matters, and quietly resist the fantasy of total control.