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Full Description
What does it mean to be in the middle of a pandemic—for me, for my country, for the world? How do our current inequalities and injustices become amplified by the demands of the pandemic and what, if anything, can be done? Who is most impacted—and why does it seem that so many of the same people are, once again, deemed expendable and less-than? How do we explain COVID-19 and its attendant traumas to our children, and what do we teach them about hope, justice, grief, and the role of imagination in survival? And once the worst has passed, how do we start again, and what should we care about as we contemplate individual and collective repair?
In this collection of public and political philosophy, both well-established and up-and-coming philosophers come together to address these and other questions born of a devastating pandemic to which they are neither objective spectators nor observers, insulated by the passage of time. Indeed, the contributors to this volume are both grounded in, and immediately affected by, their own lived realities as source material for the questions that move and motivate them.
Contents
Editor's Introduction:
In Medias Res: Philosophers as Witnesses to Disaster
Anna Gotlib
II.Pandemic and Personal and Collective Identity
How Has the Pandemic Affected Our Relationships to Our Bodies?
Vanessa Wills
COVID-19 and the Politics of Home
Corey McCall
3. Waiting to Say Goodbye
J.S. Biehl
III. Pandemic, Illness, and Disability
Sometimes Life Gives One Way Too Many Lemons: Dealing with Cancer in a Time of Pandemic
Ruth Groenhout
Don't Leave Persons With Disability Behind When Triaging Medical Scarcity
Eva Feder Kittay
Disability and Disproportionate Disadvantage
Kevin Timpe
IV.Pandemics and Social Justice
Transgender, Trump and the Public Health
Jamie Lindemann Nelson
The Lifeblood of the Body Politic
Jesi Taylor Cruz
New Labors, New Burdens, Care Work Re-narrated
Jennifer Scuro
V.Pandemic, Philosophy, and Meaning
Boundaries in a Time of Pandemic
Alexios Alexander
Science Will [Hopefully] Get Us Out of the Pandemic, But the Humanities Will Get Us Through It
Claire Katz
Disorientation, Liminality, and Hope in the Time of COVID-19
Barrett Emerick
The COVID-19 Guidebook for Living in an Alternate Universe
Eyja M. Brynjarsdóttir
VI. Pandemic and the Future
A Letter to My Nieces on Connecting the Dots
Gaile Pohlhaus
Viral Hope: When Quarantine Comes Home
Daniel Conway
VII. Index
VIII. Contributor Biographies