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        An Evental Pandemic: : Thinking the COVID-19 ‘Event’ with Deleuze and Foucault

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        Author
        Richter, Hannah
        Repo, Jemima
        Attention
        2299/25991
        Abstract
        As COVID-19 swept the world it also became the subject of a quickly growing body of theoretical scholarship aimed at understanding the social, political and economic implications of the ‘pandemic event’. Taking a step back, this paper draws on Deleuze and Foucault to interrogate whether, and in what way, the COVID-19 pandemic can and should in fact be understood as an event. We first offer a structured overview of existing ‘pandemic theory’ where we highlight that the productivity unfolded by the pandemic event is here either politically or ontologically fixed. Against this background, we show that, in distinct ways, Deleuze’s and Foucault’s concepts of the event caution against reifying a pandemic event. Any political force the pandemic can unfold is always made after the fact, and is contingent on what is (counter-)effectuated from the pandemic, or which discursive dispersions intersect with and unfold from it. The pandemic is evental rather than event – it is made up of events, and holds the potential to produce events. For critical theory, the significance of the pandemic event is thus in the first place methodological: it gives insight to how (post-)pandemic societies are produced, and where openings for the actualisation of alternatives might lie.
        Publication date
        2022-12-08
        Published in
        Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory
        Published version
        https://doi.org/10.1080/1600910X.2022.2086595
        Other links
        http://hdl.handle.net/2299/25991
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