For the final twenty years of his life, Zygmunt Bauman wrote volumes about the liquefaction of modern society. Long careers with single employers, long-lasting marriages, and communities bound together by common institutions and geography had all been replaced by more flexible structures. Nothing remains fixed. All of this is tentative. Due to the dissolution of the conventional structures that used to undertake that job, identity itself becomes a project you have to actively manage, constructing and reassembling your sense of self from consumer possibilities. After publishing the book in 2000 and giving it the name “liquid modernity,” he spent the ensuing years observing how the idea applied to circumstances he probably hadn’t completely foreseen.
One of the most self-aware items ever created at a university bookshop or a ridiculous piece of academic merchandising is the Zygmunt Bauman theory card, a novelty collectible that condenses his framework into a trading card format. Maybe both. The card takes complex sociological theory and puts it in the precise shape that Bauman’s work would suggest: it is succinct, visually pleasing, intended for rapid exchange, valued in part due to its scarcity, and bought as a way to show one’s identity. Owning one allows a sociology student to express aspects of themselves, such as their sense of humor, intellectual interests, and acquaintance with critical theory, through a commodity that analyzes how commodities operate in modern society.
The irony is almost too tidy. According to Bauman, things become transient symbols of status and belonging in today’s fluid environment, losing their sturdiness. For that dynamic, the collectible is an ideal vehicle. It is little, tradeable, self-consciously scarce, and worth precisely what other people believe it is worth. This is the logic of consumer products in general, presented in miniature. The theory card performs out Bauman’s concepts rather than merely describing them. Academic commerce is typically self-congratulatory rather than structurally self-critical, thus that is unique.
The three pillars of liquid modernity land differently in 2025 than they did in 2000, which contributes to the framework’s frequent removal from curricula and reintroduction into discourse. Gig work, contract work, and the normalization of career pivots every few years have all become standard expectations for employment. Nowadays, the infrastructure of hyper-individualism is found in social media platforms that are based on the daily curation of an identity that appeals to an audience and the building of personal brands. The main language of self-expression, consumerism, is no longer as controversial as it was when Bauman wrote it; the only question is whether this is a problem or just the state of affairs.
The fact that liquid environments produce their own kind of nostalgia and solidity-seeking is what Bauman got a little off, or at the very least, left unexplored. Collecting theoretical cards, purchasing vinyl recordings, opting for leisurely travel, and looking for analog experiences in particularly digital situations all appear to be responses to liquidity rather than extensions of it. The framework does not completely address whether those reactions are real alternatives or simply more consumer options within the same fluid market. Bauman saw the longing. He was less sure that it could be fulfilled.

The card is placed on a person’s desk or shelf, most often adjacent to other items that reveal something about their identity. Its worth stems from its scarcity, which makes it feel like a find. It was purchased for a specific purpose, such as the recognition of a name, a course, or a memorable dispute. Bauman has already described the mechanism by the time you’ve considered why you want it. Such a theory is worthy of being on the reading list.
