COVID-19作为方法

Tridibesh Dey
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引用次数: 2

摘要

像2019冠状病毒病大流行这样的事件可能成为Assa Doron和Robin Jeffrey所说的“约束性危机”:“具有可怕威胁的明确性和即时性的事件”(2018:12),影响富人和穷人,强者和弱者-尽管不均衡。过去具有约束力的危机(如1842年的汉堡大火,1858年的伦敦大恶臭和1896年的孟买瘟疫)导致了卫生和废物管理实践的普遍改革,最引人注目的是现代污水处理系统的里程碑式创新。在接下来的文章中,我利用了在印度艾哈迈达巴德市围绕城市固体废物管理(MSWM)和非正式塑料回收的政治生态进行的为期五年(2015-2019年)的不间断的民族志研究。我认为,目前的大流行可能构成这样一个具有约束力的事件,因为自由废物收集网络因封锁而瘫痪,“授权”废物收集模式被优先考虑。这导致了一种新的“基础设施”,即人类身体和废物之间的关系。
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COVID-19 as method
Events like the COVID-19 pandemic can become what Assa Doron and Robin Jeffrey have called ‘binding crises’: ‘events with the clarity and immediacy of a terrifying threat’ (2018: 12), impacting the rich and the poor, the powerful and the powerless – though unevenly. Binding crises of the past (like the 1842 Great Fire of Hamburg, the 1858 Great Stink in London and the 1896 Bombay plague) have led to ubiquitous reforms in sanitation and waste management practices, most notably landmark innovations in modern sewerage systems. In what follows, I draw on ethnographic research, conducted discontinuously over five years (2015–2019), around municipal solid waste management (MSWM), and the political ecology of informal plastic recycling in the city of Ahmedabad, India.1 I argue that the current pandemic may constitute such a binding event as freelance waste-collection networks are paralysed by the lockdown and ‘authorised’ modes of waste collection are prioritised, leading to a novel ‘infrastructuring’ of emerging relations between human bodies and wasted things.
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6
审稿时长
12 weeks
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