'This is really the first sustained, comprehensive, critical engagement with Bauman's work and as such it stands alone. The book will be valued for showing how Bauman's work serves as a powerful lens through which to make sense of the times in which we live, as well as take stock of important aspects of sociology's development from the late twentieth century and the discipline's potential to contribute to the possibility of progressive alternatives to contemporary forms of social life.'
Barry Smart, Professor of Sociology, University of Portsmouth
'Zygmunt Bauman was one of the sharpest and most insightful critics of our liquid modern times. This major new work extends many of Bauman's core arguments while at the same time addressing their underlying limits. It is a must-read for anyone interested in what social science can be and do in the current post-crisis situation.'
Nicholas Gane, Professor of Sociology, University of Warwick
'This book will prove to be one of the best critical evaluations of Bauman's important work. In his usual insightful and nuanced analysis, Rattansi illuminates Bauman's great contributions to our understanding of twentieth- and twenty-first-century social realities, while at the same time pointing out some of the basic limitations of his approach. A must-read for every sociologist seeking to understand contemporary global reality.'
Nira Yuval-Davis, Director of the Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging, University of East London
'Rattansi offers a remarkably comprehensive survey... readers come tounderstand what Bauman was: not a systematic theorist, not an empiricalsociologist, but a social philosopher who left enduring insights.'
P. Kivisto, AugustanaCollege (IL), Choice,May 2018
'Rattansi's discussion is a model of clarity and erudition'
Michael Strand, Brandeis University, Social Forces
'Rattansi has written a well-informed assessment of Bauman's writings that provides an excellent critical introduction to this author. Bauman and Con-temporary Sociology is therefore recommended not despite, but rather because of, its judgmental slant.'
Sandro Segre, University of Genoa, Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews
Introduction
Part I: The dark side of modernity
The question of modernity
Modernity and the Enlightenment
Bauman on the Enlightenment and modernity
The Holocaust's modernity
The ambivalences of modernity: a preliminary interrogation of Bauman's Eurocentric, white, male gaze
Part II: Living with postmodernity
Modernism and postmodernism
Legislators and Interpreters: extending the critique of Bauman's first exposition of postmodernity and postmodernism
Sociology and postmodernity
Aspects of Bauman's sociology of postmodernity: a critical commentary
Postmodern ethics: Bauman's Levinasian turn
Part III: Floating, slipping, sliding, drowning, boiling and freezing: the perils of liquid life
Why had Bauman become a postmodernist?
The whys and wherefores of the demise of postmodernism
'Liquid' modernity vs 'reflexive' modernity: Bauman's problem of agency, again
'Metaphoricity' in Bauman's sociology
On the liquid metaphor: what is this liquid in 'liquid modernity'?
'Solid' modernity
'Liquid' writing and liquid modernity: some ethical considerations
Liquid modernity: the bare essentials
Aspects of liquid modernity: critical reflections
Conclusion: a sociologist of hope or a prophet of gloom?
Index