Summary
Introductory Observations
Zygmunt Bauman was an influential philosopher and sociologist who lived in England since 1971, after having left his native Poland in 1968 and taught at the University of Tel Aviv for the subsequent three years. Bauman was Professor of Sociology at the University of Leeds between 1992 and 2000. Few would probably dispute that “Bauman is one of the most influential contemporary sociologists” (Ray 2007: 63; see also Elliott 2007: 51). He was a prolific writer even before his retirement and remained prolific thereafter, as indicated by the great number of books he subsequently published. Bauman was the single author in most of them, but he authored a few works in the form of interviews and conversations, which he has held with fellow sociologists or journalists. Bauman dealt with a variety of sociological subjects related to the themes of modernity and postmodernity. Here, attention will be paid first to his vision of sociology, namely, to its subject matter and epistemology, to the ethical reasons for his concern with this discipline, and to what sociology can and ought to achieve in his judgment. Some substantive themes, on which Bauman also focused, will be then dealt with. They are democracy and freedom; globalization and its ethos; liquid sociology and liquid life; modernity and postmodernity, the related themes of ambivalence, identity, consumerist culture, the holocaust, the social and moral consequences of inequality, and the role of education in the contemporary age. In the final section, some secondary literature on Bauman's oeuvre will be briefly presented.
Bauman's Vision of Sociology
Bauman has endeavored to clarify his conception of the subject matter and task of sociology in a series of conversations he held between 2012 and 2013 with the sociologists Hviid Jacobsen and Tester. Some of these conversations were subsequently published as a book titled What Use Is Sociology (Bauman et al. 2014). According to Bauman, sociology's central concern has to do with human experience, which “in our multi-vocal and multi-centered society” promotes a tendency “for a constantly widening spectrum of life pursuits to be spread all over the social body” (Bauman et al. 2014: 13); in other words, it has to do with “humans’ struggle with their own life problems” (Bauman et al. 2014: 105).
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- Information
- Bauman, Elias and Latour on Modernity and its AlternativesThree Contemporary Sociological Theorists on Modernity and Other Options, pp. 1 - 30Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2020