表演性Covid-19口罩的科技商品敏感性

IF 1.9 2区 社会学 Q1 CULTURAL STUDIES
Mehita Iqani
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章探讨了戴面具与消费文化之间的关系。从方法上讲,有目的地选择了三个关于壮观或表演佩戴口罩的案例研究,以展示口罩在大流行中可以教给我们的关于消费文化的知识。首先,英国《每日邮报》(Daily Mail)的一篇文章探讨了一次性商品的政治问题。文章中,一位“老年购物者”因为把卫生巾当口罩戴而感到羞耻。其次,在Instagram的#MaskSelfie标签下,人们戴着面具的照片越来越多,这让人们可以审视消费者公民身份的执行情况。第三,极其昂贵的奢侈品设计师面具的出现,是考虑美德信号如何成为奢侈品品牌推广平台的基础,里奇·姆尼西(Rich Mnisi)镶有施华洛世奇(swarovski)外壳的面具就是明证。以这三个例子为基础,作者提出,浪费、自拍和奢侈是一种流行的商品政治的形式,这种政治覆盖并融入了以戴口罩为标志的科学公民意识。这些共同创造了我所谓的“科学商品”的敏感性,在这种敏感性中,面膜作为一种技术已经与消费方式融为一体。这与消费文化中关于客体、主体和品牌的持续争论产生了共鸣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The sci-commodity sensibilities of performative Covid-19 face masking.

This article explores how extravagantly visible mask-wearing relates with consumer culture. Methodologically, three purposively chosen case studies of spectacular or performative mask-wearing are used to show what the face mask can teach us about consumer culture in a pandemic. First, a Daily Mail (UK) article in which an 'elderly shopper' is shamed for wearing a sanitary towel as a face mask is used to explore the politics of disposable commodities. Second, the multiplying portraits of people wearing masks archived under Instagram's #MaskSelfie hashtag allows an examination of how consumer-citizenship is performed. Third, the presence of extremely expensive luxury designer masks, as evidenced by Rich Mnisi's Swarovski-encrusted offering, is a base for considering how virtue signalling has become a platform for luxury branding. Building on these three examples, the argument is made that waste, selfies and luxury are modalities for a pandemic commodity politics that is layered over and into the scientific citizenship signalled by the wearing of face masks. Together these create what I call a 'sci-commodity' sensibility, in which the face mask as a technology has become integrated with the modalities of consumption. This has resonance with ongoing debates about the object, subject and brand in consumer culture.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
4.20%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: European Journal of Cultural Studies is a major international, peer-reviewed journal founded in Europe and edited from Finland, the Netherlands, the UK, the United States and New Zealand. The journal promotes a conception of cultural studies rooted in lived experience. It adopts a broad-ranging view of cultural studies, charting new questions and new research, and mapping the transformation of cultural studies in the years to come. The journal publishes well theorized empirically grounded work from a variety of locations and disciplinary backgrounds. It engages in critical discussions on power relations concerning gender, class, sexual preference, ethnicity and other macro or micro sites of political struggle.
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