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Anthony Elliott, University of the West of England
"This book is timely and shows accurate observation, lucid thinking and much background knowledge and wisdom"
John Calder, Camden New Journal
"Its thoughtful examination of our predicament is invigorating – like a cold shower."
New Internationalist
"Liquid Love is invaluable for grasping the problems of living in a globalized world and inspiring individuals effectively to resolve them."
Contemporary Sociology
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
don't judge the book by its cover,
By
This review is from: Liquid Love: On the Frailty of Human Bonds (Paperback)
if you wonder what todays word is about - not just love and relationships, this book is for you. The cheesy cover does not do good for this title, but what is inside is just great. Bauman explains where all our anxieties are coming from, why life is so different then it used to be even a generation ago. Liquidity is a great concect of this thinker, and it clearly describes the ways we live now. I will recommend this book to anyone who asks philosophical questions or considers societal changes in our constantly changing, liquid reality.
19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Octogenarian writes relevant book on 'modern relationships' shock!,
This review is from: Liquid Love: On the Frailty of Human Bonds (Paperback)
Given that this author is well into his eighties and has spent the last four decades or so cloistered as a prof in Leeds University's funnily shaped lecture theatres you might be forgiven for not expecting much from a book on a subject which is already straining under the weight of a hundred other irritatingly smug and patronisingly knowing alternatives. Certainly, if anyone had told me - a 'metrosexual' 'twentysomething' no less - that such a book would soon become one of the few things over which I reserve the right to annoy my friends by repeatedly recommending I would have probably offered to read it and then eat the pages if I agreed with them.
Despite initial academic appearances however, this book is by any standards a worthy rumination. Bauman is one of the few academics in the world who manages to write with half an ounce of either wit or pathos, and this particular offering sees him toning down the impressive reference points (opening quotes from Baudelaire aside) and allowing himself to be a little more literary. Also, unlike similar books to be found in the 'self-help' section of the library, his sociological mind keeps him well aware that adressing a book on the subject of love is frankly ridiculous if it's all about you, you and you. This point in particular is worth noting because it allows him to flip from romance to asylum seekers without even seeming to change subjects. (Definately a question you're unlikely to find cropping up in Neil Strauss books: 'When trying to get in a lady's pants remember to consider the genocide in Darfur'? It doesn't seem to fit somehow.) On the whole it's a fairly good entry point for the layman into Bauman's oevre as a whole too; just don't expect any savvy 21st century advice if you pick up Modernity and the Holocaust (not of this sort anyway). The only word of warning is perhaps that, I've heard it said, Bauman is an inveterate passimist. I don't know how well that holds up personally. He's elegiac here, without doubt, but he's more affected, I think, by a refusal to give in to naive optimism - and hence a refusal to stop hoping for better. A little like one of his heroes, Emmanuel Levinas, says: the truly human life is never really satisfied.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review) 5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Provides unintended incentive,
By Dr. Lee D. Carlson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Liquid Love: On the Frailty of Human Bonds (Paperback)
Written in the same spirit of his other works, with material that also overlaps these, the author of this book endeavors to paint a picture of what human relationships are like in modern "liquid" society. One could summarize the authors characterization as saying that life today is "liquid" because social hierarchies do not have enough time to form or dissolve immediately when they do, because ideology or ideas have only a transient impact, and because marketing strategies targeting consumers are only effective for moments, never long term. Life today is liquid because its elements, i.e. the things it depends on, are always being jostled around, like the molecules in a liquid, and finding stability or solidity is as elusive as ever.
One cannot therefore acquire a "meaningful" relationship when confronted with such volatility, and even the desire for this has either vanished or suffered considerable diminution. The author writes that the goal of forming relationships in modern life is one where the delights of such are not to be intermixed with the downside, and finding fulfillment must be accomplished without bearing any burdens. This attempt at "squaring of the circle" he states has resulted in a burgeoning "counseling" industry, the members of which are all too eager to perpetuate the creation of such. This cynical commentary is not established scientifically, and no examples are given, but in this work, as in his others, statistical or scientific justification is absent, only opinions proliferate. But these opinions are interesting, even titillating, and could perhaps motivate some readers to consider to what degree the author is being accurate in his characterizations of modern life. Relationships that are configured to "terminate on demand" are perhaps abundant, and finding agreement with the author is straightforward, as there are many anecdotal examples of his assertions. Sexual adventures, both "inside" and "outside" of marriage are frequent, and the flow of semen remains unabated in the modern world, if not increasing in rate. Swinging lifestyles, pornographic films and literature, and adulterous relationships are greatly assisted by technology and it seems there is a drive more for sexual creativity rather than procreation or self-indulgent pleasure. "Life is short" proclaims one website, so therefore "have an affair." Religion used to dissuade such adventures, and still does to some degree, but its hold, like other ideologies, even those of a scientific bent, is proving tenuous in the twenty-first century. If the author commits any sin in this book it is because he seems to claim to speak for all, and forgets there are some who do not find the liquidity of modern life in any way burdensome. Far from considering living in this century an "exhausting chore" these individuals embrace uncertainty and find it immensely exhilarating. We find relationships, and sex, their immediate corollary, proving to be better, not worse for exactly the reason the author finds them troublesome or contradictory. Thankfully the traditions of the past have been supplanted by the uncertainty of the present, making life both more interesting and requiring more conceptual and physical alertness. We take nothing for granted in our relationships and we work diligently to both maintain and end them if necessary. The volatility of romance and sex are not a source of anxiety but instead a fascinating scenario that models the roller coaster ride of contemporary human relationships. To paraphrase Boris Pasternack, we are certainly all pygmies before the monstrous machine of change in the twenty-first century, but its ambiguities, along with its terrors, creates ample opportunities and awesome incentives. |
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