Life in fragments : essays in postmodern morality / Zygmunt Bauman.
Material type:![Text](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/BK.png)
- 0631192670 (pbk)
- 9780631192671 (pbk)
- 170 BAU
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Standard Loan | Moylish Library Main Collection | 170 BAU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 39002100444273 |
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Life in Fragments is a continuation of the themes and motifs explored in Zygmunt Bauman's acclaimed study, Postmodern Ethics (Blackwell, 1993). Described by Richard Sennett as a major event in social theory, Postmodern Ethics subverted the pieties of subversion which rule the postmodern imagination, arguing for an ethic of being with the Other, beyond the fashionable imperative of anything goes or the deconstruction of identity through difference.
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- Introduction: In Search of Postmodern Reason
- 1 Morality without Ethics
- 2 Forms of Togetherness
- 3 Broken Lives, Broken Strategies
- 4 A Catalogue of Postmodern Fears
- 5 The Stranger Revisited - and Revisiting
- 6 Violence, Postmodern
- 7 Tribal Moralities
- 8 Morality and Politics
- Index
Author notes provided by Syndetics
Zygmunt Bauman (19 November 1925 - 9 January 2017) was a Polish sociologist and philosopher. He was driven out of Poland by a political purge in 1968 engineered by the Communist government of the Polish People's Republic and forced to give up his Polish citizenship to move to Israel. Three years after he moved to the United Kingdom. He resided in England from 1971 and became Professor of Sociology at the University of Leeds, later Emeritus. Bauman was one of the world's most eminent social theorists, writing on issues as diverse as modernity and the Holocaust, postmodern consumerism and liquid modernity.