Vaccinating capitalism: racialised value in the COVID-19 economy

IF 0.7 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
R. Knox, D. Whyte
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

ABSTRACT This article reflects on the concept of necropolitics and its usefulness for understanding the state response to COVID-19, and its unequal political and economic consequences. Focusing on the British state, the paper seeks to explore and explain the dominant forms of government intervention and regulation that sought to ameliorate the crisis and shows how this response was shaped by a set of racialised capitalist social relations. The article argues that whilst the concept allows us to grasp the racialised vulnerability to death contained within the COVID-19 response, this needs to be understood within the wider context of the extraction of value in three key instances: firstly, in terms of creating a regime that would protect corporate autonomy; secondly, in terms of a racialised division of labour within states and finally in the context of a global imperialism which marginalises and racialises those states outside of the imperial core. It uses those three instances to explore how racist necropolitics is always underpinned processes of value-in-motion that maintain corporate profitability.
为资本主义接种疫苗:新冠肺炎经济中的种族化价值
本文反思了死亡政治的概念及其对理解国家应对COVID-19的有用性,以及其不平等的政治和经济后果。本文聚焦于英国政府,试图探索和解释政府干预和监管的主要形式,试图改善危机,并展示了这种反应是如何由一系列种族化的资本主义社会关系形成的。文章认为,虽然这一概念使我们能够掌握COVID-19应对措施中包含的种族化死亡脆弱性,但这需要在三个关键实例中提取价值的更广泛背景下加以理解:首先,在创建保护企业自主权的制度方面;其次,就国家内部的种族化劳动分工而言,最后是在全球帝国主义的背景下,帝国主义核心之外的国家被边缘化和种族化。它利用这三个例子来探索种族主义的死亡政治如何总是支撑着维持企业盈利能力的动态价值过程。
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
Mortality
Mortality Arts and Humanities-Religious Studies
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: A foremost international, interdisciplinary journal that has relevance both for academics and professionals concerned with human mortality. Mortality is essential reading for those in the field of death studies and in a range of disciplines, including anthropology, art, classics, history, literature, medicine, music, socio-legal studies, social policy, sociology, philosophy, psychology and religious studies. The journal is also of special interest and relevance for those professionally or voluntarily engaged in the health and caring professions, in bereavement counselling, the funeral industries, and in central and local government.
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