KEY POINTS
  • Debt Collective co-founder Astra Taylor's new book explores why we all feel so insecure these days, regardless of our economic standing.
  • "Even people who crawl their way to the middle class or upper middle class feel like they can never get a break or rest," Taylor said.
Astra Taylor

Early on in Astra Taylor's new book, "The Age of Insecurity: Coming Together as Things Fall Apart," she tells a story set in the Brooklyn café where her sister worked until recently. On a quiet day, one of the baristas was talking with a regular customer, a specialist in medieval history, when her phone rang. It was her boss. He ordered the barista to stop chatting with the customer. There were at least eight security cameras placed throughout the small café, and the boss had been watching a livestream from his laptop.

The security cameras were there, at least in part, to make the workers feel insecure about holding on to their jobs, Taylor writes. "Even when all they wanted to do was show a bit of kindness and community to a local eccentric, the workers were perpetually worried about being fired."