Politics During and After Covid-19: Science, Health and Social Protest

被引:4
作者
Bertuzzi, Niccolo [1 ]
Lagalisse, Erica [2 ]
Lello, Elisa [3 ]
Gobo, Giampietro [4 ]
Sena, Barbara [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Parma, Parma, Italy
[2] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, London, England
[3] Univ Urbino, Urbino, Italy
[4] Univ Milan, Milan, Italy
[5] Univ Bergamo, Bergamo, Italy
关键词
Covid-19; pandemic; syndemic; public health; science; conspiracy theories; vaccine hesitancy; social movements; CRISIS;
D O I
10.1285/i20356609v15i3p507
中图分类号
D0 [政治学、政治理论];
学科分类号
0302 ; 030201 ;
摘要
Covid-19 represented a total social fact, especially for that part of the world (the so-called Global North and in particular its wealthier component) which is less used to face dramatic crises able to affect fundamental rights and provoke health threats on a daily basis. While acknowledging its enormous impact on individual biographies, political systems and socio-economic equilibria around the planet, however we contrast those interpretations that have tended to naturalize the pandemic event, reading it as unpredictable, unique, disconnected from the dynamics that guide the (mainstream) Western lifestyle and mode of production. On the contrary, the genesis and above all the management of Covid-19 are the result and the mirror of broader dynamics linked to modernity, colonialism, capitalism, in one word of the Capitalocene. For this reason, it is even more correct to speak of a syndemic, to underline the environmental determinants of health, and the social and economic inequalities (re)produced by Covid-19. We therefore consider that interpreting the pandemic/syndemic (and its governance) as a state of exception is at least partial, being instead more useful to identify its unveiling function, able to make some latent or less visible dynamics manifest. Based on such premises, we focus on some nodes of the syndemic governance, highlighting how this contributed to give continuity and accelerate typical dynamics of a neoliberal governance and worldvision. We deal in particular with four key issues: the treatment of "science " by the media; the political history of "public health " and its relationship to the modern state; the construction of legitimate dissent vs. the constructed irrationality of "conspiracy theory "; the outcomes of social protests and in particular their pathologization in the mediatic and public debate. These are also among the main topics which are critically discussed in the thirteen papers that compose this Special Issue, from a variety of disciplinary fields, and with diverse epistemological perspectives and methodological tools.
引用
收藏
页码:507 / 529
页数:23
相关论文
共 133 条
  • [1] Accetti Invernizzi C.I., 2021, TECHNOPOPULISM NEW L
  • [2] Agamben G., 2021, Where are we now. The epidemic as politics
  • [3] Agamben Giorgio., 2008, State of Exception
  • [4] Aillon J. L., 2020, VISIONS SUSTAINAB, V14, P3
  • [5] "In the Same Storm, but Not on the Same Boat": Children Grief During the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Albuquerque, Sara
    Santos, Ana R.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2021, 12
  • [6] Covid-19 and the Structural Crisis of Liberal Democracies. Determinants and Consequences of the Governance of Pandemic
    Alteri, Luca
    Parks, Louisa
    Raffini, Luca
    Vitale, Tommaso
    [J]. PARTECIPAZIONE E CONFLITTO, 2021, 14 (01) : 1 - 37
  • [7] COVID-19 and digitalization: The great acceleration
    Amankwah-Amoah, Joseph
    Khan, Zaheer
    Wood, Geoffrey
    Knight, Gary
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2021, 136 : 602 - 611
  • [8] Amselle J., 2020, BIOPOUVOIR THANATOCR
  • [9] Coronavirus biopolitics: the paradox of France's Foucauldian heritage
    Arminjon, Mathieu
    Marion-Veyron, Regis
    [J]. HISTORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF THE LIFE SCIENCES, 2021, 43 (01):
  • [10] "Do-it-yourself": Vaccine rejection and complementary and medicine (CAM)
    Attwell, Katie
    Ward, Paul R.
    Meyer, Samantha B.
    Rokkas, Philippa J.
    Leask, Julie
    [J]. SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2018, 196 : 106 - 114