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Vulnerability: Zygmunt Bauman

Zymunt Bauman There is a peculiar silence that inhabits cities. It is not the silence of empty spaces, but of crowded rooms. Not the quietness of absence, but of disconnection. We brush shoulders on metro trains, share walls in apartment towers, scroll endlessly through lives that appear fuller than our own. Yet, somewhere within, a quiet loneliness persists. The city promises almost everything: opportunity, mobility, anonymity… Anonymity can be a boon or a curse. It can relieve you of your past identities, expectations, or reputations. You can shed family labels or social hierarchies or inherited judgments. And simply be. There is a quiet dignity in that freedom. But it can also take something away. We are no longer bound to one another. We are merely placed beside each other, like the travellers in a metro compartment. Polish sociologist Zymunt Bauman [1925-2017] described our times as an age of liquid modernity : a world where relationships, identities, and commitments have ...

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