阿拉伯东部的流行政治和流行病

IF 0.3 Q4 INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS & LABOR Labor-Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas Pub Date : 2023-05-01 DOI:10.1215/15476715-10329820
Laura Frances Goffman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着社区试图理解COVID-19,世界各地的媒体都在寻找过去大流行的说明性例子。在沙特阿拉伯波斯湾沿岸的城市卡提夫,随着疫情的蔓延,1970年的隔离记忆出现在当地媒体上。本文通过重建疾病和流行政治的三个形成性组合,调查了为什么COVID-19促使公众回忆起1970年在卡提夫实施的国家霍乱隔离。首先,1953年,在大规模罢工之后,左翼活动家Nasir al-Sa - id发表了一篇演讲,展示了激进分子如何在言辞上将东部省的劳工运动与民众对医疗保健的要求联系起来。其次,从20世纪40年代到60年代,从忽视局部流行病到国家扩大对日常生活的影响,这一转变表明,即使公共卫生作为一种治理工具发展起来,当地人仍将医疗服务视为特权和不平等的表现。最后一节探讨了扩大国家对东部省的权力和国家对强制性流行病管理的接受如何融合到该政权1970年在卡提夫的霍乱隔离。在21世纪应对COVID-19的过程中,公众对1970年隔离的记忆为人们表达相互矛盾的叙述提供了空间。将这些健康和政治星座联系在一起,在公共领域呈现出明显的镇压和抗议模式,而公共领域通常会使持不同政见者沉默。
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Popular Politics and Epidemics in Eastern Arabia
Abstract As communities tried to make sense of COVID-19, media outlets around the world reached for illustrative examples of past pandemics. In Qatif, a city on Saudi Arabia's Persian Gulf coast, memories of a 1970 quarantine surfaced in local media as the pandemic unfolded. This article investigates why COVID-19 prompted public remembering of a state-imposed cholera quarantine in Qatif in 1970 by reconstructing three formative assemblages of disease and popular politics. First, a 1953 speech by leftist activist Nasir al-Saʿid in the wake of massive strikes demonstrates how activists rhetorically connected the labor movement in Eastern Province with popular demands for health care. Second, the shift from neglect of localized epidemics to the state's expanding reach into quotidian life from the 1940s through the 1960s shows how even as public health developed as a tool of governance, local people interpreted medical services as manifestations of privilege and inequality. The final section explores how expanding state authority over Eastern Province and the state's embrace of coercive epidemic management converged on the regime's 1970 cholera quarantine in Qatif. In the twenty-first-century COVID-19 response, public memory of the 1970 quarantine has provided a space for people to articulate competing narratives. Linking together these constellations of health and politics renders visible patterns of repression and protest in a public sphere that typically silences histories of dissent.
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CiteScore
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69
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