It’s hard to feel secure in this world, no matter who you are.
There’s financial insecurity: it’s hard to find a good job and make ends meet. It’s hard to find an affordable place to live, much less buy a house.
There’s political insecurity: how safe are our democratic systems from authoritarianism and extremism?
And there’s existential insecurity: the feeling of being mortal, and of not knowing what the future holds.
Today’s guest argues that there’s another type of insecurity: manufactured insecurity. This type of insecurity, argues Astra Taylor, is manufactured by capitalism, but it actually serves to undermine our ability to be more secure.
Insecurity, argues Astra Taylor, is the defining feature of our times. And acknowledging our shared insecurity can make us more collaborative, more curious, more empathetic, and look sideways to recognize potentially powerful commonalities.
Today, filmmaker, writer, and organizer Astra Taylor joins guest host Chali Pittman to unpack her work on insecurity, months after publishing a new series of public talks focused around the idea of insecurity. These talks were put on by the high-profile Canadian lecture series, the Massey Lectures, which invites thinkers and organizers to give high-profile talks each year (previous Lecturers include Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Doris Lessing, Noam Chomsky, and Margaret Atwood).
As the 2023 Massey Lecturer, Astra Taylor’s talks, and a companion book, are titled “The Age of Insecurity: Coming Together as Things Fall Apart.” You can listen to them for free at the CBC, and buy the companion book here.
Her previous books include Remake the World: Essays, Reflections, Rebellions, Democracy May Not Exist, But We’ll Miss It When It’s Gone, and the American Book Award winner The People’s Platform: Taking Back Power and Culture in the Digital Age. She regularly writes for major publications, has directed three documentaries — Zizek!, What is Democracy? and Examined Life.
Her work has appeared in many journals and magazines, including The New York Times, the Nation, the Intercept, the New Yorker, the New Republic, and so on. As an organizer, she was active in the Occupy Wall Street movement, and co-founded the Debt Collective, a debter’s union that’s had some success in pushing for student debt relief. She’s also toured with the band Neutral Milk Hotel. You can follow her on Twitter at @astradisastra.
Astra Taylor will give a virtual talk at the UW-Madison Havens Wright Center f...