Available Formats
Insecurity
By (Author) Richard Grusin
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
12th July 2022
United States
General
Non Fiction
Warfare and defence
Social and political philosophy
303.4
Paperback
272
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 38mm
Investigating insecurity as the predominant logic of life in the present moment
Challenging several key concepts of the twenty-first century, including precarity, securitization, and resilience, this collection explores the concept of insecurity as a predominant logic governing recent cultural, economic, political, and social life in the West. The essays illuminate how attempts to make human and nonhuman systems secure and resilient end up having the opposite effect, making insecurity the default state of life today.
Unique in its wide disciplinary breadth and variety of topics and methodological approachesfrom intellectual history and cultural critique to case studies, qualitative ethnography, and personal narrativeInsecurity is written predominantly from the viewpoint of the United States. The contributors analyses include the securitization of nongovernmental aid to Palestine, Bangladeshi climate refugees, and the privatization of U.S. military forces; the history of the concept of insecurity and the securitization of finance; racialized urban development in Augusta, Georgia; Amazons Mechanical Turk and the consequences of the Marie Kondo method; and the intricate politics of sexual harassment in the U.S. academy.
Contributors: Neel Ahuja, U of California, Santa Cruz; Aneesh Aneesh, U of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; Lisa Bhungalia, Kent State U; Jennifer Doyle, U of California, Riverside; Annie McClanahan, U of California, Irvine; Andrea Miller, Florida Atlantic U; Mark Neocleous, Brunel U London; A. Naomi Paik, U of Illinois, Chicago; Maureen Ryan, U of South Carolina; Saskia Sassen, Columbia U.
Richard Grusin is Distinguished Professor of English and former director of the Center for 21st Century Studies at University of WisconsinMilwaukee. He is editor of The Nonhuman Turn, Anthropocene Feminism, After Extinction, and Ends of Cinema, all from Minnesota.