The Short and the Long of It: A Political Phenomenology of Pandemic Time

Philosophy Today 64 (4):859-863 (2020)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Drawing on Françoise Dastur’s suggestion that the event is a permanent possibility that shapes lived experience, but also, when it occurs, a distinctive temporal rupture, I argue that the initial weeks of the COVID-19 epidemic constitute an event, in her sense. Connecting this phenomenological point to literatures on the politics of temporality, I suggest that the distinction between event and normal experience maps to that between epidemic and endemic. Understanding some of the political and ethical erasures of death and debility in COVID times can thus be mutually informed by phenomenological analysis.

Similar books and articles

The Effects of Underlearning upon Short- and Long-Time Retentions.E. C. Tolman - 1923 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 6 (6):466.
Effects of being observed on short- and long-term recall.Russell G. Geen - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 100 (2):395.
Imagery versus repetition encoding in short- and long-term memory.Lee Elliott - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 100 (2):270.
Transfer of information from short- to long-term memory.Vito Modigliani & John G. Seamon - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (5):768.
Training of short-term memory.Frank Restle - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 83 (2p1):224.
"Life is short, medicine is long": Reflections on a bioethical insight.Albert R. Jonsen - 2006 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 31 (6):667 – 673.

Analytics

Added to PP
2020-11-12

Downloads
321 (#60,778)

6 months
116 (#31,547)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Cressida J. Heyes
University of Alberta

References found in this work

Enduring time.Lisa Baraitser - 2017 - London,: Bloombury, Bloomsbury Academic an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc..

Add more references