Preface.
1. Introduction: Peter Beilharz: Reading Zygmunt Bauman.
2. The Telos Interview.
3. Socialism.
3.1 The Historical Location of Socalism.
3.2 Modern Times, Modern Marxism.
3.3 Communism: A Postmortem.
4. Class and Power.
4.1 Class: Before and After.
4.2 Gamekeepers Turned Gardeners.
4.3 The Rise of the Interpreter.
5. Hermeneutics and Critical Theory.
5.1 The Challenge of Hermeneutics.
5.2 Critical Theory.
5.3 Modernity.
6. Sociology and the Postmodern.
6.1 A Sociological Theory of Postmodernity.
6.2 The Re-Enchantment of the World, or, How Can One Narrate Postmodernity?.
7. Figures of Modernity.
7.1 Making and Unmaking of Strangers.
7.2 Parvenu and Pariah: The Heroes and Victims of Modernity.
8. The Century of Camps.
8.1 Sociology After the Holocaust.
8.2 Dictatorship Over Needs.
8.3 A Century of Camps?.
9. Ambivalence and Ethics.
9.1 The Quest for Order.
9.2 The Social Construction of Ambivalence.
10. Globalization and the New Poor.
10.1 On Glocalization: Or Globalization for Some, Localization for Some Others.
10.2 From the Work Ethic to the Aesthetic of Consumption.
11. The Journey Never Ends, Zygmunt Bauman Talks With Peter Beilharz.
Index.
Peter Beilharz holds a Chair in Sociology at La Trobe University, Australia. In 1980 he co-founded Thesis Eleven, the international journal of social theory. His major books include Labour's Utopias (1992), Postmodern Socialism (1994), Transforming Labor (1994), Imagining the Antipodes (1997), and Zygmunt Bauman: Dialectic of Modernity (2000)
"The Bauman Reader, edited by Beilharz, provides an excellent
condensation of the sociologist's remarkably diverse writing in
social theory, politics, and philosophy. The Reader scoops up many
of Bauman's most significant work on the nature of culture,
intellectuals, morality, ethics, modernity, postmodernity, and
globalisation." -- Anthony Elliott, The Australian
"This anthology provides the possibility for students of social
theory and postmodernity finally to 'get a handle' on the
multifaceted, deeply veined work of Zygmunt Bauman. Beilharz makes
a real contribution by providing organizational categories for
Bauman's diverse writing. Further, his broadly reasoned
introduction supplies a biographical, historical, and theoretical
framework for making overall sense of what Bauman has been up to
during his distinguished and highly original career." Jeffrey
Alexander, University of California at Los Angeles
"Zygmunt Bauman is one of the most enterprising minds in the
contemporary social sciences. Beilharz's selection provides a full
picture of Bauman as an analyst of class, as a moral philosopher,
and as a critic of globalization. The image that emerges is one of
a European intellectual of the old style who is entirely up to the
exigencies of our time." Peter Wagner, European University
Institute
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