The double-whammy trauma: Narrative and counter-narrative during COVID–Floyd

IF 1 Q3 SOCIOLOGY
Jeffrey C Alexander
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Written in the early months of the COVID pandemic, and in the midst of the second wave of Black Lives Matters protest, this article suggests that Americans experienced these shocking social events as a double-whammy cultural trauma, as deeply troubling to their collective identity as nation. How the trauma played out would determine the near-term future of American politics. Were the poor and non-white the principal victims of the double whammy, or were white Americans and the ‘hard-working middle class’ actually the injured parties? Who was the trauma’s perpetrator? Was it China, inadequate healthcare, government bureaucracy, or Trump and ‘know-nothing’ populism? The performances that provided the most felicitous answers to such questions would determine whether the country moved to the left or the right in the months before the Presidential election that would take place before year’s end.
双重打击的创伤:新冠肺炎期间的叙事与反叙事
这篇文章写于新冠肺炎大流行的最初几个月,在第二波“黑人的命也是命”抗议活动中,它表明,美国人经历了这些令人震惊的社会事件,这是一种双重打击的文化创伤,深深困扰着他们作为国家的集体认同。这种创伤如何发展将决定美国政治近期的未来。穷人和非白人是双重打击的主要受害者,还是美国白人和“辛勤工作的中产阶级”实际上是受害方?谁是造成创伤的人?是中国、医疗保健不足、政府官僚主义,还是特朗普和“一无所知”的民粹主义?为这些问题提供最恰当答案的表演将决定这个国家在年底前举行的总统选举之前的几个月里是向左还是向右。
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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来源期刊
Thesis Eleven
Thesis Eleven SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
12.50%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: Established in 1996 Thesis Eleven is a truly international and interdisciplinary peer reviewed journal. Innovative and authorative the journal encourages the development of social theory in the broadest sense by consistently producing articles, reviews and debate with a central focus on theories of society, culture, and politics and the understanding of modernity. The purpose of this journal is to encourage the development of social theory in the broadest sense. We view social theory as both multidisciplinary and plural, reaching across social sciences and liberal arts and cultivating a diversity of critical theories of modernity across both the German and French senses of critical theory.
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