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Full Description
Liminal Politics in the New Age of Disease explores the phenomenon of 'liminal politics': an open-ended 'state of exception' in which normal rules no longer apply, and things which were previously unimaginable become possible - even appearing remarkably quickly to represent a 'new normal'. With attention to the emergency measures introduced to counter the spread of Covid-19, it shows how the emergency suspension of democratic accountability, ordinary life and civil liberties, while accidental, can lend itself to orchestration and exploitation for the purpose of political gain by 'trickster' or 'parasitic' figures. An examination of the cloning of political responses from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, with little consideration of their rational justification or local context, this volume interrogates the underlying dynamics of a global technological mimetism, as novel technocratic interventions are repeated and the way is opened for new technologies to reorganise social life in a manner that threatens the disintegration of its existing patterns. As such, it will appeal to scholars and students of sociology, social theory and anthropological theory with interests in political expediency and the transformation of social life.
Contents
List of figures
List of contributors
Preface
Introduction: liminal politics in the new age of disease: Technocratic mimetism
Liminality and modernity in sickness and in health
Rulers of liminality: on imbecility, or contemporary modes of gaining and operating power
'The most despotic of all regimes': Covid-19 and the political anthropology of expertise
Pandemonium: authority and obedience under lockdown
'No human's land': comparing war rhetoric and collective sacrifice in the Great War with the pandemic
Corruption and the firefighter effect: on the commodification of liminal professions
Sovereign power and the politics of the pandemic as elementary parasitic social relation
Trickster parasite: about the snake pit of oozing disease
Conclusion
Index