Every aspect of the pandemic was said to be ‘total,’ absolute, and
undiscriminating. Its very name implied as much. The virus was
everywhere, and a threat to us all. In Philosophy, Biopolitics, and
the Virus: The Elision of an Alternative, Michael Lewis identifies
three moments within the pandemic that were conceived in such a
monolithic way: (1) ‘The Science,’ which had to be unanimous if it
was to assume a sovereign role, and to have us ‘follow’ it; (2)
‘non-pharmaceutical interventions,’ which were regarded as the
only possible response, without which death and disease would ‘run
riot’; and (3) the one sole remedy that could bring about the
promised end of the restrictions, to the exclusion of every other
conception of medicine, treatment, and care. In each case of seeming
universality, dissent immediately identifies you as a friend of the
virus. And yet if all of these cases have been revealing their
counterproductivity ever since, what are we to make of the elision of
alternatives? Is it part of a more general tendency to thrust the
questioning of hegemonic notions to the margins of respectable
discourse, inhabited solely by the mad, bad, and dangerous to know?
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The Elision of an Alternative
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781978776999
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter