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Abstract

(ProQuest: ... denotes non-US-ASCII text omitted.) In four previous books (Liquid Modernity, 2000; Liquid Love, 2003; Liquid Life, 2005; Liquid Fear, 2006), the term "liquid" has proved a useful and generative term for sociologist Zygmunt Bauman in seeking to describe the risk, fear, and uncertainty of current global actions and confrontations. While these books explore the detailed history of how "solid" Western social fabrics have unraveled and been remade into a liquid modernity, Bauman's new, slimmer, and engagingly polemical study distills those earlier contexts in order to reorganize his thesis along an arc that transitions from new fears of insecurity to new global migrations to new deregulating forces and finally to new and strange individual utopias. For Bauman, liquid modernity is a new period of global development in which five "departures" are simultaneously at work: institutions and social forms are decomposing faster than the time it takes to cast them, power and politics are divorcing as power is held by global business interests which political organizations are unable to regulate, social safety nets are dissolving at the same time as monopolies are being deregulated, long-term planning and thinking about the shape of communities and social patterns has ceded to quick fixes and quick profits, and the economic and political risks generated by global power are shifting the burden of volatile markets onto the shoulders of individuals.

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