Reconsidering the Declaration of ‘Crisis’ While Living through One

S. Trnka
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

What counts as a ‘crisis’? How do we determine an ‘emergency’? Who gets to do so, and what exactly is at stake? Scholarly examinations of ‘crises’, including, most notably, seminal work by Janet Roitman (2013), frequently underscores how the ‘crisis imaginary’ is employed to rapidly and unjustifiably expand State power. Certainly, State responses to the COVID-19 pandemic have amply demonstrated this critique, as was noted early on by both Agamben (2020) and Chomsky (2020). Nonetheless, regardless of its political manipulations, crisis can also be understood as a phenomenological state, as there exist moments during which we collectively experience being plunged into a radically different time-space that is perhaps best conceptualised as a ‘collective critical event’. Such ‘extraordinary’ times have been denoted as events beyond the scope of narration (Briggs 2003); ‘failure[s] of the grammar of the ordinary’ (Das 2007); or moments of incredulity that surpass our capacities of narration. By focusing on the languaging of the COVID-19 pandemic in Aotearoa/New Zealand, this Position Piece grapples with how to reconcile the insights offered by critiques of the political deployment of claims of ‘crises’ with anthropological and other phenomenological accounts of experiences of moments of profound upheaval.
活在危机中反思“危机”宣言
什么是“危机”?我们如何确定“紧急情况”?谁来做这件事,到底有什么利害关系?对“危机”的学术研究,包括最值得注意的珍妮特·罗伊特曼(Janet Roitman, 2013)的开创性研究,经常强调“危机想象”是如何被用来迅速和不合理地扩大国家权力的。当然,正如阿甘本(2020)和乔姆斯基(2020)早前指出的那样,国家对COVID-19大流行的反应充分证明了这一批评。尽管如此,无论其政治操纵如何,危机也可以被理解为一种现象学状态,因为存在这样的时刻,我们集体经历被卷入一个完全不同的时空,这可能是最好的概念化为“集体关键事件”。这种“非同寻常”的时代被标记为超出叙述范围的事件(Briggs 2003);“普通语法的失败”(Das 2007);或者是难以置信的时刻,超出了我们的叙述能力。通过关注新西兰奥特亚罗/奥特亚罗的COVID-19大流行的语言,这篇立场文章努力解决如何将对“危机”主张的政治部署的批评所提供的见解与对深刻动荡时刻经验的人类学和其他现象学描述相协调。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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