The Bracketing of Presence: Dematerialization and Disembodiment in Times of Pandemic and of Social Distancing Biopolitics.


Journal

Psychopathology
ISSN: 1423-033X
Titre abrégé: Psychopathology
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 8401537

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2021
Historique:
received: 06 01 2021
accepted: 01 03 2021
pubmed: 2 4 2021
medline: 25 6 2021
entrez: 1 4 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The purpose of this paper is to help us understand how and why the COVID pandemic, and its associated biopolitics of social distancing, may have affected our relationships with our own bodies and other persons, thus helping to accelerate what might be termed a bracketing of presence that was already well underway in our modern and contemporary social practices. We focus on 3 historical vectors, all rooted in specific technologies, that have profound implications at the levels of our social imaginary and prereflective ways of being: architecture, social media, and medicine. Architecture has progressively eliminated "porosity" between spaces by establishing clear borders between public and private spaces (also within the private ones), thereby contributing to our drive for social distancing. Social media have provided apparatuses that replace intercorporeal encounters with disembodied, virtual interactions mediated by images. Visual experiences that are more embodied, participatory, and "immersed" are replaced by passive forms of "seeing": the other becomes an image for me, and I for the other. The object of medicine has also recently dematerialized with the advent of the new "optical" and "digital" machines of modern medicine, which can operate remotely thanks to an increasingly powerful interface reliant on computational power and the resources of artificial intelligence, thereby dispensing with body-to-body interactions. We offer these reflections as routes to a better understanding of changes that have occurred and are occurring on the planes of both culture and individual psychological existence.

Identifiants

pubmed: 33794546
pii: 000515679
doi: 10.1159/000515679
pmc: PMC8089438
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article Review

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

113-118

Informations de copyright

© 2021 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Références

Physiol Meas. 2018 May 15;39(5):05TR01
pubmed: 29671754
World Psychiatry. 2018 Oct;17(3):276-277
pubmed: 30192103
Front Psychiatry. 2020 May 27;11:473
pubmed: 32536882

Auteurs

Giovanni Stanghellini (G)

Department of Psychological, Health and Territorial Sciences, "G. d'Annunzio" University, Chieti, Italy.
"D. Portales" University, Santiago, Chile.

Louis Sass (L)

Rutgers University, Piscataway, New Jersey, USA.

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Classifications MeSH