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[Commlist] Call for chapter proposals: The pandemic of the Forgotten: strategies of endurance among deprived groups in Ibero-America during the COVID-19 emergency
Tue Dec 20 21:53:33 GMT 2022
*Call for chapter proposals. Edited volume Helsinki University Press
(HUP). Extended Deadline January 29, 2023.*
The pandemic of the Forgotten: strategies of endurance among deprived
groups in Ibero-America during the COVID-19 emergency. Helsinki
University Press (HUP). David Ramírez Plascencia (University of
Guadalajara) and David Dalton (University of North Carolina at
Charlotte) invite abstracts for the edited collection The pandemic of
the Forgotten: strategies of endurance among deprived groups in
Ibero-America during the COVID-19 emergency, which will be submitted to
Helsinki University Press (HUP). The University press area has already
expressed great interest in the project.
The irruption of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 has brought several
negative impacts on the world economically, socially, and in the realm
of public health. Governments were forced to establish quarantines and
other similar preventive measures to slow the expansion of the virus,
people were required to work from home, and students continued their
education virtually. Despite numerous efforts, both public and private,
the effects of the pandemic were terrible: economic recession and
inflation; the massive closure of companies; and, in many countries, a
massive loss of jobs. According to World Health Organization, there have
been about 600,000,000 identified cases of Covid-19 and 14.9 million
people have died either directly or indirectly because of the virus.
That said, the effects go much further. For example, many of those
fortunate enough to have avoided infection have confronted mental health
issues such as depression and anxiety. Covid-19 has differed from past
pandemics because its outbreak appeared among a digitally interconnected
background. Digital media allowed people to follow the expansion of the
pandemic almost in real time and in first person. Many people
broadcasted their experiences live on social media, while government
officials and international organizations provided reliable information
in a timely fashion. During the early months of the health emergency,
the pandemic was a principal trending topic in digital and traditional
media. It also became an important topic of academic production. Indeed,
researchers explored all facets of the disease: from the development of
a vaccine to the relationship between the pandemic and the rise of
oppressive regulations and measures across the globe. Beyond this
omnipresence of the pandemic in the mediatic coverture, little attention
was given to those forgotten members of society.
Here we refer to those who lived in a deprived situation. Many were
racial and ethnic minorities, people marginalized due to their gender or
sexuality, refugees, sex workers, disabled people, essential workers
(drivers, medical, staff farm workers), elderly citizens living in
nursing homes, mentally ill, homeless, etc. This edited book looks for
contributions on relevant cases from Ibero-America (Latin America,
Spain, and Portugal) that discuss the negative impact of the pandemic on
forgotten members of society from marginalized groups. Possible topics
include but are not limited to public repression, negligent attitudes,
xenophobic attacks, negative media framing, human rights violations,
labor exploitation, etc. Other topics include the strategies that
marginalized individuals and communities employed to weather the
economic, social and health challenges of the pandemic. Comparative
studies related to past pandemics and historical studies focused on
marginalized groups under a pandemic context are very welcomed as well.
We are particularly interested in those proposals that focus on
describing the resilience mechanisms developed by these groups. These
may include examples of street and digital mobilizations, the use of
social media to create solidarity, local and international solidarity
networks, the role of social organizations and community initiatives,
etc. We are open to receiving proposals from multidisciplinary,
comparative, and historical approaches. You are warmly invited to
provide a document with a brief bio (no more than 250 words with titles,
affiliations, and contacts) and an abstract (500-750 words).
Please send the proposal to the following addresses:
(davidrapla /at/ gmail.com) and (david.dalton /at/ uncc.edu)
• *Deadline January 29, 2023 *
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