A new normal? The inordinate ordinary of COVID times

IF 0.2 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
R. Sheldon
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This article responds to the seismic transformations in urban relations to the ordinary, which have emerged in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, a condition in which mundane objects and actions have been permeated by the pressure of law and ethics. I draw together reflections from an ethnography conducted a few years ago in the strictly orthodox Jewish neighbourhood of Stamford Hill, London, with more recent autoethnographic reflections from the adjacent area of Stoke Newington. Exploring productive resonances between these times, spaces and scenes, the article challenges prominent representations of orthodox life as pathologically invested in the ordinary. I seek to enact a form of what Veena Das terms ‘adjacent thinking’ to make two interventions: first, to shed new light on the violence, pressures and possibilities of the transfiguration of the pandemic everyday; and second, to explore how we might cope with our yearning for the mundane-of-before by engaging with an emergent vitality in our relations to the ordinary.
新常态?COVID时代的异常平凡
本文回应了在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)大流行背景下出现的城市与平凡关系的巨变,在这种情况下,世俗的物体和行为被法律和道德的压力所渗透。我把几年前在伦敦斯坦福德山严格正统的犹太人社区进行的一项民族志研究的反思与最近在斯托克纽因顿邻近地区进行的民族志反思结合在一起。探索这些时间、空间和场景之间的富有成效的共鸣,文章挑战了正统生活的突出表现,因为它病态地投资于平凡。我试图制定一种Veena Das所说的“相邻思维”的形式,以进行两项干预:首先,对暴力、压力和每天改变这种流行病的可能性有新的认识;其次,探索我们如何在与平凡的关系中融入一种新兴的活力,从而应对我们对过去平凡的渴望。
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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CiteScore
0.90
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0.00%
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