30 C
Bangkok
Friday, June 26, 2026
Home Blog Page 2489

Zygmunt Bauman, Sociologist who Coined ‘Liquid Modernity,’ 91

Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, attends a ceremony in 1998 in Frankfurt, Germany. Photo: Heribert Proepper / Associated Press

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.

“It was the rational world of modern civilization that made the Holocaust thinkable,” Bauman wrote.

In the 1990s, Bauman coined the term “liquid modernity” to describe a contemporary world in such flux that individuals are left rootless and bereft of any predictable frames of reference.

In books including “Liquid Times” and “Liquid Modernity” he explored the frailty of human connection in such times and the insecurity that a constantly changing world creates.

“In a liquid modern life there are no permanent bonds, and any that we take up for a time must be tied loosely so that they can be untied again, as quickly and as effortlessly as possible, when circumstances change,” Bauman wrote.

In informing friends in Poland of his death Monday, Bauman’s wife wrote that he had gone “to liquid eternity.”

In Poland, he was a controversial figure in some circles. In 2006, a right-wing historian uncovered documents showing that Bauman served as an officer in a Stalinist-era military organization, the Internal Security Corps, which helped to impose communism on the nation by killing resisters to the regime.

Bauman acknowledged belonging to that unit, but he insisted that he only had a desk job. No evidence has surfaced linking him to any killings.

Some nationalists saw him as an enemy of the country.

In 2013, supporters of a far-right organization disturbed a public debate with Bauman in the western Polish city of Wroclaw, whistling and shouting “Shame!” and “down with communism!” and holding up photos of Polish resistance fighters killed by the communists.

After that he stopped visiting his homeland.

Beyond Poland, Bauman’s theories were a major influence on the anti-globalization movement. He focused on the outcasts and the marginalized, describing how many people have seen their chances of a dignified life destroyed by the new borderless world. As a result, he found a following in Spain and Italy, where young adults were hit especially hard by economic dislocation in recent years.

“The key thing was that Bauman did not talk at or down to his audience  when he was talking he was listening, when he was teaching he was learning. His books and seminars were places where we could come together and explore together how to be human,” Keith Tester, co-author of “Conversations with Zygmunt Bauman” and a former student of Bauman’s, told The Associated Press on Monday.

Bauman was born Nov. 19, 1925, in Poznan, Poland, into a Jewish family that had suffered poverty and anti-Semitism, something that inspired his lifelong belief in tolerance and social justice.

Speaking decades later of how he became a communist, he recalled his family’s poverty, the “blows and kicks” inflicted on him by non-Jewish children on the playground, and “the humiliations which my father, a man of impeccable honesty, had to suffer from his bosses to feed his family.”

He was not yet 14 when Germany invaded Poland in September 1939 and World War II began. His family survived the Holocaust by fleeing to the Soviet Union. There, Bauman, still a teenager, joined a Polish army unit that formed under Soviet command, earning Poland’s Military Cross of Valor for his bravery fighting the Nazis.

After the war, he rose quickly in the military ranks and by the early 1950s had become one of the youngest majors in the Polish army. During these years he was a communist and a member of the Polish Workers’ Party.

In 1953, he was abruptly fired from his army job, apparently the victim of the communist regime’s anti-Israel stance  Bauman’s father had been seen making inquiries at the Israeli Embassy about emigrating.

Bauman studied sociology, then philosophy, at the University of Warsaw, and was teaching there when the communist regime waged an anti-Semitic campaign in 1968. He lost his job and he and his family were expelled from the country along with thousands of other Polish Jews.

Though he was a vocal critic of Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians, once likening the West Bank to the Warsaw Ghetto, Bauman lived and taught for a short time in Israel. He lectured at universities in Tel Aviv and Haifa from 1969 to 1971, before he and his family settled in Britain.

Bauman headed the Department of Sociology at the University of Leeds until his retirement in 1990, but continued to write prolifically even after his retirement, often producing a book a year.

Among his numerous honors were the European Amalfi Prize for Sociology in 1992, the Theodor W. Adorno Award in 1998 and the Prince of Asturias Award in 2010. The University of Leeds also created the Bauman Institute in his honor, dedicated to many of his concerns, including ethics, consumerism, globalization and modernity.

Bauman’s wife of 62 years, Janina Bauman, died in 2009. He is survived by his second wife, Aleksandra Jasinska-Kania, the daughter of postwar Polish president Boleslaw Bierut, three daughters and several grandchildren.

Story: Vanessa Gera

Advertisement

Japanese Man Reported Missing From Khaosan Road

A photo of Sonam Tsuboi. Image: Tama Tsuboi / Facebook

BANGKOK — The family of a Japanese tourist is pleading for information concerning his whereabout after they lost contact with him three weeks ago while he was traveling in Bangkok.

Sonam Tsuboi, 22, was last seen at Mama Guesthouse in the popular backpacker area of Khaosan Road on Dec. 27, according to a post shared online by someone who identified himself as his brother.

“We are yet to find him but we have many people on it, now it’s just a matter of time to find out if he’s okay,” wrote Tama Tsuboi. “Thanks to all the connections we have very powerful people in Thai [sic] on this, so right now I will count on these people.”

Tsuboi is described as a slim, 1.65 meter tall man with long bushy hair and a tattoo on his left foot.

Pitak Sitthikul, chief of the police station with jurisdiction over Khaosan Road, said his force received a missing-person report for Tsuboi on Dec. 27.

According to Col. Pitak of Chanasongkram Police Station, staff at Mama Guesthouse told police that Sonam checked out on Dec. 28.

However, immigration records suggest that Tsuboi has not yet left the country, he said..

“We have alerted every relevant agency,” Pitak said. “We’re handling the matter.”

Advertisement

Reform Assembly Members Donate 5,000 Baht Each to Aid Flood Relief Efforts

Men row a boat to travel through his village Monday in Songkhla province.

BANGKOK — A junta-appointed reform assembly donated 5,000 baht each out of their 110,000 baht salary to help ongoing floods in the southern region.

Two-hundred members of the National Reform Steering Assembly were asked by their president, Capt. Tinnaphan Nakata, Monday to donate a small sum of their salary to help support the nearly one million people affected by flash floods in the southern provinces.

To provide instant assistance before noon, two members, police Lt. Gen. Suwira Songmetta and Seri Suwanpanon volunteered to pay one million baht in advance as the assembly’s reserved budget could not meet the sought amount.

The death toll had reached 21 as of Monday afternoon and two people remained missing as a result of the ongoing floods affecting 12 provinces in the southern region. Damages were expected to not exceed 15 billion baht, the Joint Standing Committee on Commerce, Industry and Banking said Monday.

The reform steering assembly was formed in October 2015 to succeed the National Reform Council which was scrapped after it voted against the draft charter. With a slightly different name, the steering assembly serves mostly the same function by proposing laws and studying issues related to what the junta wants to reform.

Each member appointed by Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha receives a 71,230 baht monthly salary plus an extra 42,330 baht payment resulting in 113,560 baht monthly allowance.

The president receives more at 119,920 baht, while the vice presidents get 115,740 baht every month.

 

Related stories:

19 Die as Floods Continue to Submerge South

Malls, Airport Closed as Worst Flood in Decades Hit South

Advertisement

Paris Police: 16 Arrested Over Kardashian West Jewelry Heist

In this Oct.3, 2016 file photo, a French police officer enters the residence of Kim Kardashian West in Paris.

PARIS — Police in Paris say 16 people have been arrested in connection with the October theft of more than $10 million worth of jewelry from Kim Kardashian West.

Police say robbers forced their way into a private Paris residence where Kardashian West was staying, tied her up and locked her in a bathroom before making off with her jewelry.

The reality TV star was in Paris attending fashion week shows. At the time a spokeswoman for Kardashian West said she was badly shaken but physically unharmed.

The robbery raised new concerns about security in the French capital after a string of deadly extremist attacks.

Advertisement

Japanese Films To Screen in 4 Provinces

BANGKOK — The Japanese Film Festival returns in strong form for a 40th time this year with selected films to commemorate the 130th anniversary of Japan-Thailand relations.

Fifteen recent Japanese films, from comedies to thrillers, will show February through March at the Japanese Film Festival for cinephiles to indulge in the island nation’s unique culture and storytelling.

Headlining is talented director Naomi Kawase’s 2015 drama “Sweet Bean.” Premiered at Cannes and praised for its sentimentality, the film is about an old lady who offers to help a man make sweet red bean paste for his dorayakis, which helps boost his business.

“What A Wonderful Family!” is a comedic 2016 film about a wife who wants to divorce her husband as a birthday present after having been married for 50 years.

For thrill-seekers, there’s Cannes’ Un Certain Regard-winner “Creepy.” Directed by  Kiyoshi Kurosawa and premiered at the 2016 Berlin Film Festival, the novel-based story follows an ex-police detective and a criminal psychologist who move to seek peace in their suburban town only to face a psychopathic neighbor who wishes to take their lives.

Tickets are 120 baht in Bangkok and 80 baht in Chiang Mai. Entry is free in Khon Kaen and Phuket.

The schedules and more information are available online.

The festival kicks off in Bangkok Feb. 4-12 at SF World Cinema, CentralWorld. After that, it’ll tour to Chiang Mai on Feb. 23-26 at Maya Lifestyle Shopping Center, March 3-5 to Central Khon Kaen and March 17-19 at Central Festival Phuket.

 

Advertisement

Fugitive Dhammakaya Spokesman Allegedly Photographed in France

A photo said to show Ong-art Thamnitha in France.

BANGKOK — Police on Monday were scrambling to confirm whether the spokesman of the controversial Dhammakaya movement had managed to slip through a police cordon and flee to France.

In a photo which surfaced on social media over the weekend, a man said to be Ong-art Thamnitha is dining with a group of monks at a Japanese restaurant in France. Ong-art, who had regularly defended his Buddhist sect in media appearances, had not been seen in public since he was charged with inciting unrest in December.

His colleague said he could not confirm Ong-art’s whereabouts.

“No one knows for sure, because no one could contact him,” Phra Pasura Dantamano said by telephone.

Read: A Look Inside the Besieged Wat Dhammakaya

He said the photo could be an old one. “Mr. Ong-art has traveled to a lot of overseas [Dhammakaya] centers, including the ones in France.”

The court approved on Dec. 15 an arrest warrant for Ong-art on charges of insurrection. Police accused Ong-art of mobilizing temple followers to resist police effort to arrest its fugitive ex-abbot Dhammachayo, who’s wanted on multi-million baht embezzlement charges.

Critics of Wat Dhammakaya have widely shared the photo and ridiculed authorities for somehow letting Ong-art escape the country.

A photo said to show Ong-art Thamnitha in France.
A photo said to show Ong-art Thamnitha in France.

The Department of Special Investigation, the agency responsible for prosecuting Dhammachayo and Ong-art, will ask French authorities whether Ong-art is really in the country, its spokesman Woranan Silam told reporters Monday.

Deputy junta chairman Prawit Wongsuwan also said he’s instructed police to find out whether or not the photo is genuine as soon as possible.

Dhammachayo, who left his post as the abbot last month but retained a ceremonial rank within the sect, faces two separate criminal charges. The first was for receiving funds embezzled from a credit union by one of its executives who is now serving a 16-year jail term. The most recent charge stemmed from illegally building a meditation center on public land.

The temple insists the charges are politically motivated, and said its spiritual leader could not turn himself in because he’s confined to his sick bed. The refusal led to an ongoing law enforcement presence outside the movement’s headquarters in Pathum Thani province.

Related stories:

Police Close Up on Wat Dhammakaya

Dhammakaya Asks Court to Cancel Search Warrant as Tensions Mount

Deadline for Dhammakaya Abbot to Surrender Expires, Again

 

Advertisement

New Nokia Phone to Launch Exclusively in China

A screenshot of Nokia's video for its latest smartphone model. Image: Android 5x1 / YouTube

HELSINKI — The Nokia mobile phone is coming back.

Finland-based HMD Global says it’s launching its first smartphone  the Nokia 6  in China, under license from the network provider  once the world’s top cellphone maker.

The aluminum handset, with a 5.5-inch screen, will be the first Nokia to run the Android operating system.

HMD Global, the licensee of the Nokia brand for cellphones and tablets, said Sunday it chose to launch in China  with more than 550 million smartphone users  because of a “desire to meet the real world needs of consumers in different markets around the world.”

The Nokia 6 will be available in early 2017 at an approximate price of 1,699 yuan ($245). It was unclear when it would be available in other markets.

Advertisement

Thai Man Accused of Raping Russian Tourist on Koh Samui

Sattawat Choomee, at the center, is escorted to Bophut Police Station on Monday morning.

KOH SAMUI — A 27-year-old Thai man confessed to robbing and raping a Russian tourist on the island of Samui, police said Monday.

Sattawat Choomee admitted upon his arrest he pretended to be a victim of the ongoing flood Friday night and asked the woman for a motorcycle ride home, Koh Samui police said. He later allegedly robbed and assaulted her.

“We found all of the [victim’s] stuff in his possession,” Lt. Col. Sirichai Kertsri, deputy chief of Bophut Police Station, said by telephone. “He also confessed to all charges.”

Police are still waiting for a formal medical examination result from a hospital to confirm that the rape took place before they can file sexual assault charges against the suspect, though Sirichai said he’s confident of Sattawat’s guilt.

“I believe that happened, but we still have to wait for evidence,” the lieutenant colonel said.

Sattawat was arrested shortly after midnight. He’s been charged with robbery.

Advertisement

Internet Fat Cat ‘Pusheen’ Invades Paragon

Pusheen goods on sale Monday at Siam Paragon. Photo: Patcharaporn Suksiri

BANGKOK— Pusheen, famous for wiggling around the Internet in impossibly cute cartoon forms, is waiting to plop into fans’ laps at Siam Paragon shopping mall since last Thursday.

Purchase everything Pusheen from plushies of differing sizes and colors, fuzzy slippers, tablet cases and sleep masks in the likeness of the Internet-famous cartoon domestic shorthair at the mall’s third floor BeTrend store.

’Do you miss me? Then gimme kanom.’ Photo: Pusheen in Thailand / Facebook
’Do you miss me? Then gimme kanom.’ Photo: Pusheen in Thailand / Facebook

“The most popular Pusheen item for Thais is the plain gray 12-inch Pusheen, priced at 1,290 baht. They sell really well on weekends,” said Patcharaporn Suksiri, a store saleswoman.

Thai Pusheen following even before the local sale of the official plushies yesterday has a significant cat cult presence, with Pusheen in Thailand garnering more than 10,000 likes.

Pusheen became available in BeTrend’s Siam Paragon mall, open 10am until 10pm, since last Thursday.

Pusheen, familiar to netizens worldwide for her Facebook stickers and appearance on cute comic strips, was first created in 2010 by Claire Belton and Andrew Duff. Pusheen, meaning “kitten” in Irish, was based on Belton’s real-life chubby gray tabby and her food-loving, sloth-like antics.

Since then, Pusheen merchandise, such as plushies, keychains and the book “I Am Pusheen The Cat,” have been sold in response to her Internet fame.

Advertisement

Cop Exams May Be Voided Due to Massive Fraud

Police examination applicants file through security checkpoints on Dec. 4 at Ramkhamhaeng University in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — A recent entrance examination for the Bangkok police force might be nullified because of widespread fraud involving more than 300 applicants, police commanders said Sunday.

Police suspect those exam takers were in fact “hired guns” – professionals paid by some applicants to sit for the exam on their behalf. Police commissioner Chakthip Chaijinda pledged to thoroughly investigate the case and said all measures are on the table, including voiding the entire exam itself.

“I sympathize with every side. Honest people are affected,” Gen. Chakthip said. “So, we must have all the facts before making decision.”

As of this moment, the exam result is still not canceled, he added.

More than 13,000 people sat for the Bangkok police entrance examination Dec. 4, vying for the 1,000 open positions in the force. On Friday the Metropolitan Police Bureau’s Training Center, the unit responsible for the exam, announced it suspected 347 applicants to be “hired guns,” and subsequently filed complaints to a local police station.

Speaking to reporters Friday, the training center’s commander, Col. Uthane Nuiphin said such “hired guns” charged their clients about 20,000 to 30,000 baht for taking the exam.

The selection process for recruits in the Bangkok police force was halted in light of the revelation, Gen. Chakthip said.

Many applicants unrelated to the fraud have voiced their frustration on social media that their future in the police force is now threatened by the ongoing investigation.

The top scorer of the exam, Panat Natiparkdi, told Matichon he’s planning to file a petition to Gen. Chakthip, urging him to root out and prosecute the actual fraudsters rather than canceling the exam altogether.

Advertisement

Hot News

LATEST NEWS

Bangkok
scattered clouds
30 ° C
32.2 °
30 °
80 %
2kmh
48 %
Fri
31 °
Sat
36 °
Sun
36 °
Mon
36 °
Tue
34 °