With approximately one-fifth of the world’s population currently in
lockdown, the novel coronavirus (COVID–19) pandemic has drastically changed
many of our lives. According to official statistics, the virus has now infected
over one million individuals across 209 countries and territories, and such
draconian measures are likely to have saved countless lives. But, the effects
of the virus reach far beyond its biological capacity to cause illness.
Originating in Wuhan, China, its rapid spread across national boundaries has
drawn attention to the porous and interconnected world that we live in. The
resulting economic consequences of the lockdown measures highlight the
volatility of the global economy and the precarity of those whose labour
sustains it. At the same time, it has transformed the way we interact with one another
and understand ourselves, as new forms of creativity and solidarity emerge. In
the time of coronavirus, both critical cultural analysis and sustained personal
reflection are needed more than ever to put these emerging new realities into
perspective.
Several leading intellectuals have already published their views on the
coronavirus pandemic. Judith Butler, for one, has considered how the
pandemic lays bare the radical inequalities inherent to global capitalism,
drawing particular attention to the fraught politics of healthcare in the
United States. Elsewhere, David Harvey has examined the broader repercussions for the dynamics of global capital accumulation;
modes of consumerism that have long underpinned Western economies are now
crashing before our very eyes, he says, and with potentially devastating
consequences. On the other hand, philosopher Giorgio Agamben has come under
criticism for his dismissal of the pandemic as a manufactured “state of exception,” aimed
at facilitating a project of total control by governments and corporations, while
denying the harsh reality of contagion altogether.
For the duration of the coronavirus pandemic, students at The Lisbon Consortium encourage scholars, artists and other cultural practitioners to
reflect further on the multifarious impacts of this bewildering new reality. To
facilitate this, we are launching a new website, Culture in Quarantine, through which we hope to publish critical
writing, visual essays and other creative responses to the pandemic over the
coming weeks. Later, the website will remain online to serve as an archive of
our collective thoughts and experiences.
We welcome contributions of any length in the following formats:
- Essays
Personal reflections, cultural critique and analysis, adaptations or excerpts
of larger research projects. Please write for a general audience and avoid too
much academic jargon.
- Fiction
Creative responses to the coronavirus pandemic, including prose and
poetry of all genres.
- Visual essays
All combinations of photography (or other visual material) and text are
welcomed. Please indicate any specific layout requirements and we will try to
accommodate.
Please also include a short biography of no more than 100 words.
Send your contributions to cultureinquarantine@gmail.com.
Submissions will be accepted and published at Culture in Quarantine
on an ongoing basis.
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