COVID-19 as a Collective Trauma in Global Politics: Disruption, Destruction and Resilience
A special issue of Societies (ISSN 2075-4698).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 February 2023) | Viewed by 20005
Special Issue Editors
Interests: memory politics; gender studies; Central Eastern Europe; trauma in global politics
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Collective traumatic experiences, such as war and genocide, affect the ways in which states and non-state actors construct biographical narratives about themselves and engage in meaningful relations with other actors in international politics. They become the backbones of stories about mass suffering and resistance, thus providing a sense of collective identity. At the same time, these traumatic events are mostly ruptures in national meaning-making, capable of shattering routines and expectations for nationally bounded communities. COVID-19, however, has claimed millions of lives and caused mass suffering globally. If, undoubtedly, the pandemic has been both destructive and disruptive for billions of people, was it qualitatively different from other national collective traumas, such as war or genocide? Was the pandemic capable of creating a true, global collective trauma? Drawing on the growing body of literature on trauma and memory in International Relations, this Special Issue sets out to explore COVID-19 as a global trauma in international politics. It promises to focus on various dimensions of this global traumatic experience: political (How does this traumatic experience correlate with previous traumas? How have communities responded to its global, traumatic effect?); cultural (How has COVID-19 generated new discourses? How are new collective remembrance practices created?); socio-economic (How have developments in international economics associated with COVID-19 affected the collective experiences of trauma?); emotional (How have feelings of uncertainty, fear and anguish affected political behavior in dealing with the pandemic?); intersectionality (How has COVID-19, as a trauma, affected the Global South, minorities, women, people of color, and indigenous people differently?).
Contributions have to follow one of the three categories of papers (article, conceptual paper or review) for the journal and address the topic of the special issue.
Dr. Dovile Budryte
Dr. Erica Resende
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- collective trauma
- collective memory
- global politics
- commemoration
- remembrance
- injustice
- COVID-19
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