ABSTRACT

This book examines the insecurity that besets our lives in the contemporary world, whether as a result of natural disasters, human negligence or, more recently, threats to security in the form of terrorist activity, which itself gives rise to new fears: fear of travel, agoraphobia, distrust of others and existential anxieties.

Revealing the connection between the two components of our insecurity, as reflecting on and conditioning human existence, and producing social problems, the author brings this to bear on the notion of security that modernity had sought to guarantee to its citizens – a notion that has slowly crumbled with the crisis of modernity and with the emergence of the "liquid" world.

Now insecurity is endemic and has so firmly become part of us as to be accepted as an unpleasant aspect of normality that we must live with. However, the necessity of living in a risk society in which security has emerged as important does nothing to dispel the fear that accompanies us at all times. An engagement with the thought of Bauman that explores fear as an accompaniment to the end of modernity and its assurances, State of Fear in a Liquid World offers developments of the thesis of liquid modernity and will appeal to scholars and students of sociology, social theory and politics with interests in individualisation, social change and (in)security.

chapter 1|6 pages

Phobos, a god repressed

chapter 2|6 pages

Fear of the machine

chapter 3|7 pages

Human adaption to the machine

chapter 4|10 pages

Natural and moral disasters

chapter 5|4 pages

Danger as an everyday experience

chapter 6|7 pages

Social security and individual insecurity

chapter 7|7 pages

Fear of invasion

chapter 8|10 pages

Fear of exclusion

chapter 9|7 pages

Waste in our future

chapter 10|7 pages

The frailty of personal relationships

chapter 11|12 pages

Forms of reassurance

chapter 12|3 pages

Globalisation and “overclass”

chapter 13|6 pages

The Panopticon inside the net

chapter 15|4 pages

Unde malum? A temporary conclusion