流行病死亡中的死亡政治与亡命者哀悼

Hugo Canham
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摘要

COVID-19提醒我们,死亡不仅是不可避免的,而且对于那些被建构为死亡束缚、迫在眉睫和内在的人来说。在本文中,我认为这个大规模死亡的季节导致了一种加剧的死亡政治,在这种政治中,国家试图完全控制尸体和死亡世界。这对我们如何排序以及与非洲死亡世界的关系有着重要的影响。哀悼和丧葬仪式是处理失落、仪式净化和更新的重要社交场所。2019冠状病毒病大流行以及与之相关的死亡人数急剧上升意味着,哀悼、仪式、社交和潜在的复兴从根本上受到了破坏。发生这种破坏的原因是,与非洲人如何纪念和埋葬死者有关的仪式和习俗必须改变,这是卫生协议和政府颁布的防止传染病的规定的结果。然而,通过媒体对COVID-19遇难者的报道,我表明,面对家庭和社区参与的悲情哀悼和逃亡式哀悼,死亡政治仍然脆弱。本文试图探讨流行病死亡的主题,以及当仪式和关系受到威胁时我们所失去的东西的意义。它表现了哀悼的情色和逃亡的哀悼作为一种反抗的形式黑人下层阶级总是反叛地参与其中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Thanatopolitics and Fugitive Mourning in Pandemic Death
COVID-19 has reminded us that death is not only inevitable but also, for those who are constructed as death bound, imminent and immanent. In this paper, I contend that this season of mass death has led to an intensified thanatopolitics where the state has sought to take over full control of corpses and the death world. This has major implications for how we order and relate to the African death world. Mourning and funeral rites are important sites of sociality for the processing of loss, ritual cleansing and renewal. The COVID-19 pandemic and the dramatic rise in deaths associated with it mean that mourning, rites, sociality and potential renewal are fundamentally disrupted. This disruption occurs because rituals and customs associated with how Africans honour and bury the dead have to change as a result of health protocols and government regulations that are promulgated against contagion. However, through media reports on those killed by COVID-19, I demonstrate that thanatopolitics remains fragile in the face of the erotics of mourning and fugitive mourning that families and communities engage in. This paper is an effort to engage with the subject of pandemic death and the meaning of what we lose when ritual and relation are threatened. It presents the erotics of mourning and fugitive mourning as forms of resistance that the black underclasses are always insurgently engaged in.
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