As in Bauman’s work more generally, the personal and the political are interwoven in this book. Bauman’s life, which followed the same trajectory as the social and political upheavals of the 20th century, left its trace on his thought. Bauman describes his upbringing in Poland, military service in the Red Army, working for the Polish Secret Service after the war and expulsion from Poland in 1968, providing personal accounts of the historical events on which he brings his social and political insights to bear. His reflections on history, identity, Jewishness, morality, happiness and love are rooted in his own personal journey through the turbulent events of the 20th century to which he bore witness.
These last conversations shed new light on one of the greatest social thinkers of our time, offering a more personal perspective on a man who changed our way of thinking about the modern world.
Table of Contents
PrefaceNote
Love and Gender Choosing a partner: why we are losing the capacity to love
Experience and Remembrance Fate: how we make the history that makes us Notes
Jewishness and Ambivalence Adaptation: why were Jews attracted to communism?
Note
Intellect and Commitment Sociology: why it should not separate objective from personal experience
Notes
Power and Identity Modernity: on the compulsion to be no one, or become someone else
Notes
Society and Responsibility Solidarity: why everyone becomes everyone else’s enemy
Notes
Religion and Fundamentalism The end of the world: why it is important to believe in (a non-existent) God
Notes
Time travel: where is ‘the beyond’ today?
Present and Future Human waste: who are the witches of modern society?
Notes
Happiness and Morality The good life: what does it mean to take off shoes that are too tight?
Notes
Select bibliography
Zygmunt Bauman
Janina Bauman
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