Covid-19 大流行时期的焦虑和政治行动。

IF 0.3 1区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY IRISH HISTORICAL STUDIES Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Epub Date: 2023-01-16 DOI:10.1177/00471178221149632
Andreja Zevnik
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自 2020 年春季全球 Covid-19 大流行开始以来,世界各国已采取各种措施遏制病毒。他们限制公众集会,限制人们在家中和公共场所的流动和聚集。然而,这些限制措施并没有阻止另一连串事件--全球 "黑人生命至上"(Black Lives Matter,BLM)抗议活动。2020 年夏天,全球各地的人们动员起来,抗议警察杀害乔治-弗洛伊德。在英国,所有大城市都举行了 "黑人生命 "抗议活动,但他们每周都会在较小的社区举行 "下跪 "活动。在这篇论文中,我感兴趣的是在全球大流行病期间所经历的焦虑如何促成了大规模种族正义政治行动的动员,以及在全球大流行病时期,特别是在 BLM 等反种族主义抗议活动的背景下,我们如何将焦虑视为政治空间的动员力量。在讨论焦虑在政治动员中的作用之前,本论坛文章首先探讨了全球流行病如何为种族正义政治行动创造条件。在这里,我首先详细介绍了拉康精神分析学派是如何理解焦虑的,然后探讨了焦虑对 BLM 种族正义抗议活动的启示,特别是 2020 年 6 月 7 日布里斯托尔抗议活动中拆除科尔斯顿雕像的事件。
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Anxiety and political action in times of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Since the beginning of the global Covid-19 pandemic in the spring of 2020 countries across the world have implemented various measures to contain the virus. They have restricted public gatherings, mobility and congregation of people at homes and in public places. These restrictions however did not stop another chain of events - the global Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests. In the summer of 2020 people across the globe mobilised to protest the police killing of George Floyd. In the UK the protest for Black Lives took place in all major cities, but they also continued weekly in smaller communities by 'taking the knee'. What interests me in this contribution is how anxieties experienced during the global pandemic contributed to the mobilisation of large-scale political actions for racial justice and how might we consider anxiety as a mobilising force in political space in times of global pandemic in particular in the context of anti-racist protests such as BLM. This forum contribution opens by considering how global pandemic aided conditions for political action for racial justice, before discussing the role of anxiety in political mobilising. Here I first detailed how anxiety is understood in Lacanian psychoanalysis before considering what it tells us about the BLM protests for racial justice and specifically the removal of the Colston statue during the Bristol protest on June 7 2020.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
7.10%
发文量
25
期刊介绍: This journal is published jointly by the Irish Historical Society and the Ulster Society for Irish Historical Studies. Published twice a year, Irish Historical Studies covers all areas of Irish history, including the medieval period. We thank William E. Vaughn of the management committee of Irish Historical Studies for his permission to republish the following two articles.
期刊最新文献
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