Anxiety is part of contemporary life, yet rarely seen as anything other than personal and intimately psychological. Cultural Studies scholar Nicky Falkof joins us to discuss her work on fear and anxiety in South Africa, and how such negative emotions are often collective and collectively constructed – and relate deeply to our identities. Indeed, as Nicky tells us, if you ask yourself what or whom you’re scared of, you quickly face the question of who you think you are.
Hear about Nicky’s teenage engagement in goth culture as South Africa approached the end of apartheid, and how it led her to think critically about fear and social change. Plus, she explains why that country, and Johannesburg in particular – as explored in her new book “Worrier State” – is seen as such a fascinating site for studying anxiety. With Rosie and Alexis, she also reflects on the architecture of fear – and why some people are unjustly expected to live in fear while others feel entitled to fight it.
We also take on the trope of reflexivity, as Nicky considers how being truly reflexive requires not just introspection and soul-searching but meaningful practical action. With reflection on thinkers from Zygmunt Bauman to Jacob Dlamini and from Sara Ahmed to Sigmund Freud. Plus: what can the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles possibly teach us about anxiety?
Guest: Nicky Falkof
Hosts: Rosie Hancock, Alexis Hieu Truong
Executive Producer: Alice Bloch
Sound Engineer: David Crackles
Music: Joe Gardner
Artwork: Erin Aniker
Find more about Uncommon Sense at The Sociological Review.
Episode Resources
From The Sociological Review
- ‘Under attack’: Responsibility, crisis and survival anxiety amongst manager-academics in UK universities – Vik Loveday
- Decolonising and re-theorising the meaning of democracy: A South African perspective – Heidi Brooks, Trevor Ngwane, Carin Runciman
- Social class, symbolic domination, and Angst: The example of the Norwegian social space – Andreas Schmitz, Magne Flemmen, Lennart Rosenlund
By Nicky Falkof
- Worrier State: Risk, anxiety and moral panic in South Africa
- The End of Whiteness: Satanism and family murder in South Africa
- Find out more on Nicky’s website
Further reading
- “The Cultural Politics of Emotion” – Sara Ahmed
- “Gender Trouble” – Judith Butler
- “Liquid Fear” – Zygmunt Bauman
- “Female Fear Factory” – Pumla Dineo Gqola
- “Native Nostalgia” – Jacob Dlamini
Read more about Sigmund Freud, and the work of Johnny Steinberg.