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[Commlist] Call for papers: Covid-19 as a Global Crisis - International Journal of Cultural Studies
Sat Feb 13 20:09:54 GMT 2021
International Journal of Cultural Studies – Call For Papers
*Special Issue: Covid-19: The cultural constructions of a global crisis*
Issue Editors: Myria Georgiou (LSE) and Paul Frosh (Hebrew University of
Jerualem)
What is the meaning of the coronavirus pandemic as a global crisis? Or,
to unpack this somewhat naïve question: what does such a crisis feel,
look likeand signify to those living through it? How are its legibility,
coherence and significance /as/ a ‘crisis’ constructed and performed
across highly variable cultural and social contexts? How does its
occurrence maintain, amplify or transform cultural practices,
representational repertoires, solidarities and power relations? And how
can inquiry into something as vast, multifarious and pervasive as the
pandemic generate new theory about the cultural construction of ‘crisis’
in our time - particularly since, at the moment of writing, it is still
going on? In short, how might we address both the intensely particular
manifestations of Covid-19 in different locations, times and
populations, and yet grasp its totality as a global phenomenon?
Calling the pandemic a ‘crisis’ draws it firmly into the orbit of
cultural studies in three primary ways, which can be summarized through
three interconnected questions: how is Covid-19 constructed /as/ a
crisis? what it is a crisis /of/? and /through/ what cultural agencies
is it produced and reproduced?
*How is Covid-19 constructed /as/ a crisis? *At least one tradition of
cultural studies, associated with the work of Stuart Hall, placed
notions of ‘crisis’ and ‘the conjuncture’ at the centre of its concerns.
A key question here is how to theorize and investigate Covid-19 in
relation to these terms. In particular, if modernity as such is
understood as a period in which crisis is endemic and ongoing, as a
permanent state of affairs where catastrophe and transformation are
immanent and always /about to/ occur, what then distinguishes a crisis
like Covid-19 as a distinctive irruptive /event/? If, as Janet Roitman
has suggested, the term ‘crisis’ has been inflated to the point of
ubiquity in writings about a range of conditions (economic crisis,
environmental crisis, political crisis, humanitarian crisis, social
crisis, etc.), and ‘is mobilized as the defining category of historical
situations, past and present’ (2014:3), then what – compared to all of
these other crises - makes Covid-19 distinctively, and exceptionally,
/critical/? And how is such an event experienced, performed, and
represented in its exceptional character to the billions of people
caught up in it?
*What is Covid-19 a crisis /of/? *For many people, Covid-19 is a
personal crisis of life and death, debilitating illness, and
bereavement. For many others, it is a social calamity and source of
collective trauma in their communities and cities. And for most, it is a
deeply destabilizing condition of work and livelihood insecurity at
present and for years to come. Thus, Covid-19 is far more than a
large-scale public health emergency. It has**exposed the usually
unnoticed structures, hierarchies and norms of everyday lifeworlds and
socio-political formations at multiple and intersecting scales, from the
individual body (which becomes subject to increasingly intensive
monitoring), to the social and political body (which becomes subjected
to deepening collective surveillance), while also generating new and
renewed solidarities across local, national and global spaces. Moreover,
Covid-19 appears to constitute a /meta-crisis/ which enables the
widespread visibility of /other crises/ and conflicts which were already
endemic in different parts of the world: crises of wealth and welfare
inequality, scientific expertise, knowledge and truth (the ‘infodemic’),
political leadership, racial discrimination, mediation and civility,
migration and borders, religious conflict and environmental disaster. It
is a crisis of the universality of risk, its inequitable distribution
across populations and places, and of our (in)capacity to develop a
politics capable of addressing it. It is experienced by and represented
to billions of people as a time of immense danger, disruption and
potential change, both for their individual lives and for their
collective ways of life. Perhaps the question to be addressed is, then:
of what is Covid-19 /not/ a crisis?
*/Through/** what cultural agencies is the crisis produced and
reproduced? *The catalyzing and transformative potential of pandemics
for societies is not historically new. What /does/ appear to be novel
about Covid-19 is its combined pervasiveness and extensiveness. Covid-19
is /pervasive/ in that its influence plays out at virtually all scales
of life, from individual physical interactions and personal mobility, to
relations within and between social and cultural groups, states,
national economies, the activities of transnational entities such as
corporations and international organizations, as well as through
observable shifts in the environmental impact of human behaviour. The
crisis is /extensive/ not only in that it is experienced, performed and
represented as a variable /local/ phenomenon in virtually every humanly
inhabited part of the world, but is also widely depicted in these places
/as global/, as something affecting everyone, no matter where they live,
at this very time. /Media/ are central to this simultaneous
pervasiveness and extensiveness, not only because they represent the
crisis to large audiences around the world, but also because
contemporary media technologies are profoundly and almost ubiquitously
embedded into the social world at small and large scales, from the
intimate everyday lives of individuals to global infrastructures
(Couldry and Hepp, 2017). Covid-19 visibly demonstrates the existential
stakes of this media pervasiveness and extensiveness, particularly
during ‘lockdowns’, through the sudden substitution of physical
co-presence with mediated interaction and digital intimacy and
solidarity via digital screens. Hence part of the pandemic’s cultural
significance is as a widely shared and represented experience of
mediated relations /in extremis/: of technologized ‘intimacy at a
distance’ and digitized ‘solidarity in proximity’ becoming paradoxically
obligatory conditions for much social life and cultural activity
(especially across cities of the Global North). The crisis, then,
generates a historically contingent but powerful affinity between the
pandemic, on the one hand, and the primary mechanisms of its cultural
mediation.
These questions and their elaboration only really begin to set the scene
for thinking about Covid-19 as a /global crisis/. In this special issue
we invite substantial contributions (5,000-7,000 words) that engage with
‘the crisis’ from perspectives connected to cultural studies, media and
communications, and that take transnational relations and dynamics as
their principal frames of reference. Particular topics of possible
interest include, but are not limited to:
- the representation of Covid-19
- race, gender, sexuality, class, age, disability and Covid-19
- Covid-19, migration and (im)mobility
- Covid-19 as a biopolitical crisis
- Covid-19, nationalism and transnationalism
- data appropriation, surveillance and Covid-19
- celebrity, consumer culture and Covid-19
- media and cultural industries and Covid-19
- Covid-19 and historical transformation
- cultural memory and Covid-19
- urban and rural crisis experience and solidarity
- Covid-19, mediation and mediatization
- live performance culture (live music, theatres etc.) in crisis
- Covid-19 and art
Please submit abstracts (300 words max.) to: (paul.frosh /at/ mail.huji.ac.il)
<mailto:(paul.frosh /at/ mail.huji.ac.il)> and (m.a.georgiou /at/ lse.ac.uk)
<mailto:(m.a.georgiou /at/ lse.ac.uk)>
Deadline: Abstracts: March 10 2021; Papers: 31 July 2021
No payment from authors is required.
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