Identity in the disrupted time of COVID-19: Performativity, crisis, mobility and ethics.

Anxiety Cultural rupture Ethics Identity Performativity States of exception

Journal

Social sciences & humanities open
ISSN: 2590-2911
Titre abrégé: Soc Sci Humanit Open
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101777910

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2021
Historique:
received: 30 04 2020
revised: 16 05 2021
accepted: 19 05 2021
entrez: 8 11 2021
pubmed: 9 11 2021
medline: 9 11 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in a global cultural crisis, experienced through various losses of everydayness, including particularly restrictions on mobility and the sudden emergence of new fears and anxieties over infection. This paper theorises some of the ways in which that crisis can be understood in cultural and discursive terms, as a rupture in normativity, a disturbance in social relationality and as a state of exception. Drawing on Judith Butler's theories of performativity, the paper investigates how such a cultural rupture can be understood to affect performative subjectivity, identity and selfhood, whereby a breach in normative everydayness prompts the re-constitution of subjectivity itself. The paper explores how the reconfiguration of identity is experienced as corporeal and as a site of anxiety and lost dignity. The final section of the paper draws some initial conclusions about the potency of cultural and identity transformation for new ethics of non-violence, arguing that the obligation to resist norms of mobility and contact is an ethical obligation of necessary cohabitation.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34746752
doi: 10.1016/j.ssaho.2021.100175
pii: S2590-2911(21)00071-1
pmc: PMC8558729
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

100175

Informations de copyright

© 2021 The Author.

Auteurs

Rob Cover (R)

RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC, 3051, Australia.

Classifications MeSH