The Racial Geographies of Covid-19

This article argues two things: the Covid-19 pandemic is, like many epidemics before it, characterized by a racialization of disease; that racialization has the effect of obfuscating the larger etiology of viruses, an etiology that is extended ecologically and includes the circuits of capital accumu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Willem Schinkel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2021-11-01
Series:Ardeth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/2334
Description
Summary:This article argues two things: the Covid-19 pandemic is, like many epidemics before it, characterized by a racialization of disease; that racialization has the effect of obfuscating the larger etiology of viruses, an etiology that is extended ecologically and includes the circuits of capital accumulation. As I seek to show, these two points become apparent in the ways of publicly imagining and narrating the pandemic, which includes the modes of knowledge of virology and epidemiology. Knowledge of the smallest particles, of germs, is bound up in politically urgent ways with racialized conceptions of much larger geopolitical units.
ISSN:2532-6457
2611-934X