Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19

This article proposes an analytical framework that highlights embodiment’s ontological complexities and the ways in which the securitization of the body, during the COVID-19 pandemic, brought our embodied existence under the scrutiny of the invasive gaze of multiple social authorities, framing publi...

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Main Author: Florentina C. Andreescu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-11-01
Series:Societies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/12/6/163
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author Florentina C. Andreescu
author_facet Florentina C. Andreescu
author_sort Florentina C. Andreescu
collection DOAJ
description This article proposes an analytical framework that highlights embodiment’s ontological complexities and the ways in which the securitization of the body, during the COVID-19 pandemic, brought our embodied existence under the scrutiny of the invasive gaze of multiple social authorities, framing public and private modes of being as existential security risks. It engages with the research developed by psychiatrist Iain McGilchrist and clinical psychologist Louis A. Sass on schizophrenia, tracing the extent to which COVID-19 reshaped reality displays a dynamic akin to this mental disorder, through its abnegation of embodied presence, retreat into virtual register, and abnormal interpretations of reality. To spotlight this dynamic’s consequences, the article explores three interconnected features of schizophrenia, namely hyper-reflexivity, diminished self-presence, and disturbed grip on the world. These help to contextualize the ways in which a large segment of the population in the United States responded to the COVID-19 pandemic. To that end, the article highlights the development of a virtual universe of conspiracy theories, shaping a citizenry which, akin to schizophrenics are simultaneously cynical and gullible, manifesting a vehement distrust of aspects of life that need to be implicit, while readily embracing conspiratorial worldviews.
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spelling doaj.art-ada62df8753b4ea284affeb047091d392023-11-24T18:01:36ZengMDPI AGSocieties2075-46982022-11-0112616310.3390/soc12060163Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19Florentina C. Andreescu0Department of International Studies, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC 28403, USAThis article proposes an analytical framework that highlights embodiment’s ontological complexities and the ways in which the securitization of the body, during the COVID-19 pandemic, brought our embodied existence under the scrutiny of the invasive gaze of multiple social authorities, framing public and private modes of being as existential security risks. It engages with the research developed by psychiatrist Iain McGilchrist and clinical psychologist Louis A. Sass on schizophrenia, tracing the extent to which COVID-19 reshaped reality displays a dynamic akin to this mental disorder, through its abnegation of embodied presence, retreat into virtual register, and abnormal interpretations of reality. To spotlight this dynamic’s consequences, the article explores three interconnected features of schizophrenia, namely hyper-reflexivity, diminished self-presence, and disturbed grip on the world. These help to contextualize the ways in which a large segment of the population in the United States responded to the COVID-19 pandemic. To that end, the article highlights the development of a virtual universe of conspiracy theories, shaping a citizenry which, akin to schizophrenics are simultaneously cynical and gullible, manifesting a vehement distrust of aspects of life that need to be implicit, while readily embracing conspiratorial worldviews.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/12/6/163COVID-19embodimentsecuritizationschizophreniaconspiracy theories
spellingShingle Florentina C. Andreescu
Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19
Societies
COVID-19
embodiment
securitization
schizophrenia
conspiracy theories
title Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19
title_full Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19
title_fullStr Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19
title_short Disembodiment and Delusion in the Time of COVID-19
title_sort disembodiment and delusion in the time of covid 19
topic COVID-19
embodiment
securitization
schizophrenia
conspiracy theories
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4698/12/6/163
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