死亡平等?

IF 0.4 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Yousra Sbaihi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

新冠肺炎大流行引发了人们对死亡的新认识——尽管人们努力搁置日常生活中不可避免的死亡这一概念,但死亡已经失去了它的无私,并成为文化、生存和政治斗争的场所。尤其是摩洛哥媒体,将焦点集中在集体埋葬、人满为患的医院和不断上升的死亡率上,以放大公民对死亡的恐惧,从而迫使他们按照世界卫生组织的指导方针呆在家里。鉴于他们在身体和情感上与病毒的接近,本文对来自摩洛哥非斯的新冠肺炎患者进行了半结构化叙事采访,以分析他们在污染前、污染期间和污染后的经历对死亡和死亡的新认知的影响。它得出了一个关键的结果:康复后象征性的永生回归,前患者成为英雄,成功地避开了媒体不懈努力传达的恐怖。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Equal in Death?
The COVID-19 pandemic has sparked new perceptions of death—dying has lost its disinterestedness and transpired to be a site of cultural, existential and political struggles, despite efforts to shelve the idea of an unavoidable death from everyday life. Moroccan media, in particular, has centered its focus on mass burials, over-crowded hospitals and spiraling death rates to amplify citizens’ fear of death and thereby coerce them to stay at home in concert with the WHO guidelines. Given their physical and emotional proximity to the virus, this article zooms in on semi-structured narrative interviews with COVID-19 patients from Fez, Morocco, to analyze the implication of their pre-, during- and post-contamination experiences on the novel perceptions of death and dying. It arrives at a pivotal result: the return of symbolic immortality upon recovery when ex-patients become heroes who have succeeded in sidestepping the horror that the media worked untiringly to convey.
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来源期刊
Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication
Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: The Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication provides a transcultural academic sphere that engages Middle Eastern and Western scholars in a critical dialogue about culture, communication and politics in the Middle East. It also provides a forum for debate on the region’s encounters with modernity and the ways in which this is reshaping people’s everyday experiences. MEJCC’s long-term objective is to provide a vehicle for developing the field of study into communication and culture in the Middle East. The Journal encourages work that reconceptualizes dominant paradigms and theories of communication to take into account local cultural particularities.
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