越南胡志明市公共交通中的社会距离、互动和(非)拥挤的公共空间

Catherine Earl
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引用次数: 0

摘要

越南过去抗击地方病的经验为其应对新冠肺炎疫情提供了信息。这种反应涉及一种新兴的生物社会范式,即长期适应与病毒感染共存的生活。这篇文章超越了传统的人类学工作,发出了重新思考人群和新冠肺炎的邀请。我通过参与跨学科对话提供了一条前进的道路,从广泛的来源中汲取灵感来理解这一正在发展的问题。通过其公共交通服务西贡巴士和环境抗议的镜头,我审视了2020-2021年的“疫情季节”(múa dịch)已经改变了人们对人群的意识、在(非)拥挤的公共空间中的生活方式以及对网络公共空间的监管。在这样做的过程中,本文探讨了在新兴的生物社会范式的背景下,越南城市社会关系的政策制定和转型中现有和新兴的转变。这篇文章通过分析疫情预防政策对人群转变的影响,为医学人类学做出了贡献——从被视为需要社会控制的反国家集会转变为一种亲国家的参与公民身份,在一个“超越人类”的世界中,公众与网络活动家社区的接触就是例证。
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Social Distancing, Interaction, and (Un)crowded Public Space in Mass Transit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Vietnam’s national response to the COVID-19 pandemic is informed by its past experiences of fighting endemic disease. This response involves an emerging biosocial paradigm of long-term adaptation to living with the co-presence of viral infections. Moving beyond traditional anthropological work, this article issues an invitation to (re)think crowds and COVID-19. I offer a path forward by engaging in an interdisciplinary dialogue, drawing inspiration from a wide range of sources to understand this unfolding problematic. Through the lens of its public transport service Saigon Bus and environmental protests, I examine how the 2020–21 ‘pandemic season’ (mùa dịch) in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam’s largest city, has transformed consciousness about crowds, ways of being in (un)crowded public spaces, and the regulation of networked public space. In doing so, this article explores existing and emerging shifts in policymaking and transformations of urban Vietnamese social relations, in the context of the emerging biosocial paradigm. The article contributes to medical anthropology by analysing the impact of pandemic prevention policies on the transformation of crowds—from being viewed as anti-state assemblies requiring social control into a form of pro-state participatory citizenship, exemplified by public engagement with networked activist communities in a ‘more-than-human’ world.
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72 weeks
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