We are what we smell: the smell of dis-ease during lockdown.

IF 0.7 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Louisa Allen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

How does the COVID-19 pandemic shape subjectivity? This paper is concerned with contributing to theorising subjectivity at an ontological level. It draws on a feminist new materialist understanding of subjectivity as an intra-active becoming of human-non-human matter that includes smell. Smellwalks are mobilised to apprehend how subjectivity is altered via restrictions around movement and social connection during lockdown. This sensory method recognises knowing is not simply a cognitive practice and that odour actively shapes understandings of ourselves and the world. The varying presence and absence of odours in and out of lockdown eventuate a re-arrangement of subjectivity which draws on Vannini's (2020) notion of atmospheric dis-ease. Lockdown produces a subjectivity of dis-ease which generates changes in perception of self and others, as sources of potential viral contagion. Lockdown's material conditions engender a 'socially flattened' and 'suspended subjectivity' as our 'normal' selves are experienced as being put on hold until the global crisis abates.

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我们就是我们闻到的气味:封锁期间疾病的气味。
COVID-19大流行如何塑造主观性?本文关注的是在本体论层面上对主体性的理论化做出贡献。它借鉴了女权主义新唯物主义对主体性的理解,认为主体性是包括气味在内的人类-非人类物质的一种内部活动。在封锁期间,通过对行动和社会联系的限制,嗅觉行走被动员起来,以了解主体性是如何改变的。这种感官方法认识到认知不仅仅是一种认知实践,气味积极地塑造了我们对自己和世界的理解。封锁内外不同的气味存在和不存在最终导致主观性的重新安排,这借鉴了Vannini(2020)的大气疾病概念。封锁产生了一种疾病的主观性,从而产生了对自我和他人的看法的变化,这是潜在的病毒传染的来源。封锁的物质条件导致“社会扁平”和“暂停的主体性”,因为我们的“正常”自我被体验为被搁置,直到全球危机消退。
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来源期刊
Subjectivity
Subjectivity SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
20.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: Subjectivity is an international, transdisciplinary journal examining the social, cultural, historical and material processes, dynamics and structures of human experience. As topic, problem and resource, notions of subjectivity are relevant to many disciplines, including cultural studies, sociology, social theory, geography, anthropology and psychology. The journal brings together scholars from across the social sciences and the humanities, publishing high-quality theoretical and empirical papers that address the processes by which subjectivities are produced, explore subjectivity as a locus of social change, and examine how emerging subjectivities remake our social worlds.
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