- 09 Jan 2017 19:14
#14761208
There is a crack in everything,
That's how the light gets in...
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2017/01 ... .html?_r=0
This is probably more important to the leftist academics on the forum, but this is one of the men my mother often discussed during my youth.
His critical analyses of modernity and globalisation were ahead of their time, in my opinion.
RIP, Mr. Bauman, in the liquid eternity.
- WARSAW, Poland — Zygmunt Bauman, one of the most prominent and prolific European sociologists of recent decades, has died at the age of 91. The Polish-born left-wing thinker's works explored the fluidity of identity in the modern world, the Holocaust, consumerism and globalization.
Bauman died at his home in Leeds, England, on Monday surrounded by his family, according to Anna Zejdler-Janiszewska, a Warsaw-based philosophy professor and friend of Bauman's who was informed of his death by his wife.
Renowned for an approach that incorporated philosophy and other disciplines, Bauman was a strong moral voice for the poor and dispossessed in a world upended by globalization. Whether he was writing about the Holocaust or globalization, his focus remained on how humans can create a dignified life through ethical decisions.
He wrote more than 50 books, notably "Modernity and the Holocaust," a 1989 release in which he differed with many other thinkers who saw the barbarism of the Holocaust as a breakdown in modernity. Bauman viewed the mass exterminations of Jews as the very outcome of such pillars of modernity as industrialization and rationalized bureaucracy.
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This is probably more important to the leftist academics on the forum, but this is one of the men my mother often discussed during my youth.
His critical analyses of modernity and globalisation were ahead of their time, in my opinion.
RIP, Mr. Bauman, in the liquid eternity.
There is a crack in everything,
That's how the light gets in...