
On Un/Certainty
The Uses of Doubt in Dangerous Times
Natasha Lennard(Author)
Verso Books (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 13. October 2026
Book
Hardback
176 pages
978-1-80429-561-8 (ISBN)
Description
While politicians, CEOs, and pundits reflexively invoke "uncertain times" to explain everything from pandemic responses to climate inaction, journalist and theorist Natasha Lennard offers a radical intervention. Lennard demonstrates how our obsession with uncertainty masks the violent certainties that dominate our fracturing world.
On Un/Certainty applies philosophical insight to political practice, offering readers not just analysis but hope-and conceptual tools with which to act. The book tackles contemporary flashpoints through an original philosophical lens, demystifying our constant talk of crisis, polycrisis, and omnicrisis. Lennard examines the way entrenched conceptions of gendered experience are weaponized to harass the most vulnerable. Dissecting the discourse around borders, she reveals their enforcement to be a site of paranoid vigilance and violent property logics, which threaten millions of lives. On Un/Certainty addresses head-on the limits to traditional forms of political persuasion and demands that we think anew about how to build more liberatory forms of life.
Drawing on the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein and placing his work alongside thinkers rarely put into conversation, Lennard contends with the nature of certainty, identity, and ideology as we struggle into the future.
On Un/Certainty applies philosophical insight to political practice, offering readers not just analysis but hope-and conceptual tools with which to act. The book tackles contemporary flashpoints through an original philosophical lens, demystifying our constant talk of crisis, polycrisis, and omnicrisis. Lennard examines the way entrenched conceptions of gendered experience are weaponized to harass the most vulnerable. Dissecting the discourse around borders, she reveals their enforcement to be a site of paranoid vigilance and violent property logics, which threaten millions of lives. On Un/Certainty addresses head-on the limits to traditional forms of political persuasion and demands that we think anew about how to build more liberatory forms of life.
Drawing on the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein and placing his work alongside thinkers rarely put into conversation, Lennard contends with the nature of certainty, identity, and ideology as we struggle into the future.
Reviews / Votes
An inoculation against apathy and nostalgia, this is an essential, provocative collection for our confounding times. -- Astra Taylor One of the most brilliant and compelling thinkers of our time. -- Mychal Denzel Smith * author of Invisible Man * Compassionate and merciless, Natasha Lennard's writing is proof that moral philosophy must not be left to the mealymouthed centrists. -- Andrea Long Chu We are snowed under by known unknowns. Thank heavens for Natasha Lennard then, here to talk us through the expectations we place on words and walk us out of the numbness induced by their mindless repetition. -- Quinn Slobodian, author of <i>Hayek's Bastards</i> Fascism attempts to destroy the capacity to think. Natasha Lennard restores it here with lyric philosophy. -- Hannah Zeavin, Associate Professor of History, UC BerkeleyMore details
Edition
Paperback original
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 210 mm
Width: 140 mm
Weight
567 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-80429-561-8 (9781804295618)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
NATASHA LENNARD is a British-born, Brooklyn-based writer. She is a professor of critical journalism at the New School for Social Research in New York and a columnist for the Intercept. Her work has appeared in the Nation, Bookforum, Dissent, and the New York Times, among others. She is the author of Being Numerous: Essays on Non-Fascist Life and coauthor (with Brad Evans) of Violence: Humans in Dark Times.
Content
Introduction: On Un/certainty
1. Certain Crisis
2. Border Certainty
3. Cis Certainty. Trans Knowledge
4. Seeing-As
Conclusion: Not Starting from Scratch
1. Certain Crisis
2. Border Certainty
3. Cis Certainty. Trans Knowledge
4. Seeing-As
Conclusion: Not Starting from Scratch