纪念COVID-19故事

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 0 RELIGION
Sindiso Bhebhe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

口述历史不仅仅是底层民众的认识论,他们没有任何其他途径来叙述和保存他们的本体论。它超越了学术领域,冒险进入治疗领域,因为它治愈了心碎的人,被征服的人,失去亲人的人,并在这个过程中振荡到记忆和情感的档案。它是一种认识论,不仅为地球上受压迫的人提供治疗性治疗,也为社会上富裕的成员提供治疗性治疗。在2019冠状病毒病的这个时代,人们遭受了难以言喻的难以忍受的痛苦,口述历史作为一种认知纪念工具,可以派上用场,用于为幸存者、受影响者、感染者和国家提供治疗性治疗。这篇文章基于作者对南非如何通过口述历史和纪念馆等方式纪念COVID-19的看法。这篇文章回顾了有关世界纪念这一流行病的意图的文献,以及南非如何从所提供的例子中学习或忘记。本文还探讨了如何操纵口述历史方法,如COVID-19故事的众包,以适应南非各地平民对大流行的叙述。研究结果表明,南非可以从已经开始纪念这一流行病的国家那里学到很多东西,因为南非拥有这样做的经验、技能和基础设施。贡献:该研究为正在进行的关于如何在考虑包容和排斥的记忆政治的情况下纪念COVID-19大流行的辩论做出了贡献。这项研究与该期刊的范围有关,因为它涉及通过口述历史和纪念馆等方式纪念COVID-19大流行的国家活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Memorialisation of COVID-19 stories
Oral history is more than an epistemology of the subaltern who do not have any other avenues of narrating and preserving their ontologies. It transcends the academic domain and ventures into the field of therapy as it heals the broken hearted, the subjugated, the bereaved and in the process oscillating to an archive of memory and feelings. It is an epistemology that offers therapeutic healing not only to the downtrodden of the earth but also to the affluent members of the community. In this era of COVID-19 where people have suffered untold and unbearable pain, oral history comes handy as an epistemic memorialisation tool that can be used to offer therapeutic healing to the survivors, the affected, the infected and the nations. The article is based on the author’s views on how South Africa may memorialise COVID-19 through oral history and memorials among others. The article reviews literature on the world’s intentions in memorialising the pandemic and how South Africa can learn or unlearn from the proffered examples. The article also interrogates how oral history approaches, such as crowdsourcing of COVID-19 stories, can be manipulated so that it accommodates the pandemic’s narratives of the commoners found in the locations of South Africa. Research findings reveal that South Africa can learn a lot from the countries that have started to memorialise the pandemic in the sense that it has the experience, skills and infrastructure to do so.Contribution: The study contributes to the ongoing debate about how to memorialise the COVID-19 pandemic taking into consideration the memory politics of inclusion and exclusion. The study is linked to the scope of the journal in the sense that it touches on the national memorialisation of the COVID-19 pandemic through oral history and memorials among others.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.20
自引率
50.00%
发文量
246
审稿时长
15 weeks
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