ABSTRACT

This volume analyses cultural perceptions of safety and security that have shaped modern European societies. The articles present a wide range of topics, from feelings of unsafety generated by early modern fake news to safety issues related to twentieth-century drug use in public space. The volume demonstrates how ‘safety’ is not just a social or biological condition to pursue but also a historical and cultural construct. In philosophical terms, safety can be interpreted in different ways, referring to security, certainty or trust. What does feeling safe and thinking about a safe society mean to various groups of people over time? The articles in this volume are bound by their joint effort to take a constructionist approach to emotional expressions, artistic representations, literary narratives and political discourses of (un)safety and their impact on modern European society

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Title
Size: 0.22 MB

part Section 1|64 pages

Philosophical Conceptualisations of Safety

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chapter 1|20 pages

Security, Certainty, Trust

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Historical and Contemporary Aspects of the Concept of Safety
Size: 0.44 MB
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chapter 3|24 pages

The Shackles of Freedom

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The Modern Philosophical Notion of Public Safety
Size: 0.48 MB

part Section 2|64 pages

Security Cultures in History

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Size: 0.43 MB

chapter 5|22 pages

Criminal, Cosmopolitan, Commodified

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How Rotterdam's Interwar Amusement Street, the Schiedamsedijk, Became a Safe Mirror Image of Itself
Size: 1.64 MB

chapter 6|24 pages

Tourists, Dealers or Addicts

Title
Security Practices in Response to Open Drug Scenes in Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Zurich, 1960–2000
Size: 0.28 MB

part Section 3|64 pages

Narratives and Imaginaries of Safety

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chapter 7|22 pages

The ‘Golden Age’ Revisited

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Images and Notions of Safety in Insecure Times
Size: 4.10 MB

chapter 8|20 pages

Safety as Nostalgia

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Infrastructural Breakdown in Stefan Zweig's Beware of Pity (1938)
Size: 0.47 MB

chapter 9|20 pages

Brace for Impact

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Spatial Responses to Terror in Belfast and Oslo
Size: 0.45 MB

part Section 4|60 pages

Narratives and Imaginaries of Unsafety

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chapter 10|20 pages

Safe at Home?

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The Domestic Space in Early Modern Visual Culture
Size: 2.90 MB

chapter 11|16 pages

The Transfer of Nineteenth-Century Representations of Unsafety

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A Dutch Adaptation of Eugène Sue's Les Mystères de Paris
Size: 0.42 MB

chapter 12|22 pages

Feeling Lost in a Modernising World

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A Critique on Martha Nussbaum's Emotion Theory through an Analysis of Feelings of Unsafety in Magda Szabó's Iza's Ballad
Size: 0.46 MB