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The anthropology of hot takes
in
Social Anthropology/Anthropologie sociale
Author:
Aditi Surie von Czechowski
Aditi Surie von Czechowski
Churchill College
ads89@cam.ac.uk
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DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1111/1469-8676.12911
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Issue
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Article Information
Article Category:
Research Article
Page Count:
1
Print Publication Date:
01 May 2020
Online Publication Date:
01 May 2020
Copyright:
© The Authors 2020
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Issue Table of Contents
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Issue Information
EDITORIAL
Editorial
FORUM ON COVID‐19 PANDEMIC
Introduction
Waiting during the time of COVID‐19
The COVID exception
When rumours fly like helicopters
Towards more equitable global health research in a COVID‐19 world
Raoult, social distancing and the rebelious French ‐ A reflection on COVID‐19 treatments online debates
Viruses beyond epistemic fallacy
Pandemic vitality
‘Home sweet home’
Times and metaphors of pandemics
COVID‐19 and climate change reactions
Dealing with the unexpected
Overlapping values
Citizenship after COVID‐19
Visual art experience during the coronavirus pandemic
From wet markets to Wal‐Marts
Home‐made biopolitics
When the virus makes the timeline
The microbiopolitics of a ‘total‐trans‐species’ social institution
COVID‐19 and spatio‐temporal disjuncture in the experience of danger
‘Virtual choirs’ and the simulation of live performance under lockdown
The China–US blame game
Disaster nativism
Life versus capital
Touch in the new ‘1.5‐metre society’
What does COVID‐19 distract us from? A migration studies perspective on the inequities of attention
‘To all the anti‐vaxxers out there…’
PlastiCorona
The COVID‐19 epidemic through a gender lens
Business as Usual
Science as a virulent myth archive
On the relationship between science and reality in the time of COVID‐19
Compounded disasters
The nation‐state, class, digital divides and social anthropology
Viral living
A return to class solidarity
On epidemiological ruination
COVID‐19 Darwinism
Fortifying breath in this moment of spray
Contagion and memory
‘What is anthropology good for?’ Anthropologists working in public health interstices
Pandemic vulnerabilities, mortality and empathy in fieldwork
Quest for outsmarting fate
The enforced cooling down of an overheated world
Pandemic … or
syndemic
? Re‐framing COVID‐19 disease burden and ‘underlying health conditions’
On viral concepts
Youth in a viral age
Corona conspiracies
Partying at times of crises and pandemics
The legal void and COVID‐19 governance
COVID‐19 as the primary agent
COVID‐19
(In)human perspectives
Reproductive health in the time of SARS‐CoV‐2
Ethnographic fieldwork quarantined
A GP, a virus and a patient
Whose responsibility? COVID‐19 in a homeless shelter in the UK
COVID‐19 and human–virus relationality
Containing the future shock
Religious returns, ritual changes and divinations on COVID‐19
Public space during COVID‐19
Ground glass
Material methods for a rapid‐response anthropology
The national(ist) necropolitics of masks
The Nation‐State after the Virus
Living inside a globalised Panopticon
From sociality to social distancing
We need each other
Coronavirus
Taking matters into our own hands
Citrus flower
Definitions, differences and inequalities in times of COVID‐19
COVID‐19,
dugnad
and productive incompleteness
COVID‐19 and competitive markets of securitisation
Metabolic publics
Jishuku
, social distancing and care in the time of COVID‐19 in Japan
Looking into the past, living in the future
COVID‐19 testing and the Soviet biowarfare project
Reclaiming the social from ‘social distancing’
The myth of masks
Mutating states
Imagining our futures in different keys
What does it mean to be a good neighbour?
The challenge of breath
Fear of others
Qui habitat
Anthropology and anthropologists in times of crisis
The coronavirus hit us strong
The Curve
The anthropologist amidst and beyond
A pandemic in prisons
Letter from the (un)seen virus
To value or re‐evaluate? On the anthropological perspective of a crisis
All in this together? Isolation and housing in ‘lockdown London’
Document the quotidian transformations of the pandemic
Urban vulnerabilities
Data‐in‐terror
Underestimation/complacency
The anthropology of hot takes
Where have the gatherings gone? Reweaving the social fabric in the time of pandemic and interpersonal distancing
Rethinking states of emergency
Local response to the global pandemic (COVID‐19) in Bangladesh
On the proximity of distancing
Teaching ethnographic methods under COVID‐19
The border and the pandemic
Care/punishment dilemma in COVID‐19 hospital treatment
A pandemic is not a war
COVID‐19, malaria and animal spirits
When a crisis is embedded in another crisis
The pandemic present
From sovereignty to governmentality and back
A poetic reflection on the COVID‐19 pandemic
SPECIAL ISSUE ON CROSSING RELIGIOUS AND ETHNOGRAPHIC BOUNDARIES: THE CASE FOR COMPARATIVE REFLECTION
Introduction
‘Living as Londoners do’
Crossing borders
‘At least I am married’
The shade of religion
Religiosity and its others
The comparative anthropology of religion, or the anthropology of religion compared
ARTICLES
Liquid crystal and the A1
Delighting in kinship
REVIEWS
Appadurai, Arjun and Neta Alexander. 2019. Failure. Cambridge: Polity Press. 120 pp. Hb.: £40.00. ISBN: 9781509504718.
BattagliaGiulia, . 2018. Documentary film in India: an anthropological history. London: Routledge. 216 pp. Pb.: £36.99. ISBN 9780367891565.
Bielo, James, . 2018. Ark Encounter: the making of a creationist theme park. New York: New York University Press. 223 pp. £18.11. ISBN‐13: 978‐1479842797.
Chew, Sing C. 2018. The Southeast Asia connection: trade and polities in the Eurasian world economy, 500 BC–AD 500. New York: Berghahn Books. 188 pp. Hb.: US$135.00. ISBN: 978‐1‐78533‐788‐8.
Chua, Liana and Nayanika Mathur (eds.) 2018. Who are ‘we’? Reimagining alterity and affinity in anthropology. New York: Berghahn Books. 264 pp. Hb.: US$135.00. ISBN: 978‐1‐78533‐888‐5.
Cummins, Fred. 2018. The ground from which we speak: joint speech and the collective subject. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. 229 pp. Hb.: £61.99. ISBN: 978‐1‐5275‐1600‐7.
Ellison, Susan Helen. 2018. Domesticating democracy. The politics of conflict resolution in Bolivia. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. 296 pp. Pb.: US$26.95. ISBN: 978‐0‐8223‐7108‐3.
HoffmannMichael, . 2018. The partial revolution: labour, social movements and the invisible hand of Mao in Western Nepal. New York: Berghahn Books. 232 pp. Hb.: US$120.00. ISBN: 9781785337802.
Jensen, Casper Bruun and Atsuro Morita (eds.) 2019. Multiple nature‐cultures, diverse anthropologies. New York: Berghahn Books. 158 pp. Hb.: US$120.00. ISBN: 9781789205381.
Koonings, Kees, Dirk Kruijt and Dennis Rodgers (eds.) 2019. Ethnography as risky business: field research in violent and sensitive contexts. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. 254 pp. Hb.: US$95.00. ISBN: 9781498598439.
LiGeng, . 2019. Fate calculation experts: diviners seeking legitimation in contemporary China. New York: Berghahn Books. 158 pp. Hb.: US$110.00. ISBN: 9781785339943.
Maida, Carl A. and Sam Beck. 2018. Global sustainability and communities of practice. New York: Berghahn Books. 236 pp. Hb.: US$135.00. ISBN: 9781785338458.
Marsh, Diana E. 2019. Extinct monsters to Deep Time: conflict, compromise, and the making of Smithsonian’s fossil halls. New York: Berghahn Books. 334 pp. Hb.: US$130.00. ISBN: 9781789201222.
Martinez, Francisco and Patrick Laviolette (eds.) 2019. Repair, brokenness, breakthrough: ethnographic responses. New York: Berghahn Books. 340 pp. Hb.: US$105.00. ISBN 978‐1‐78920‐331‐8.
Seremetakis, C. Nadia. 2019. Sensing the everyday. Dialogues from austerity Greece. London: Routledge. 249 pp. Pb.: £27.99. ISBN: 9780367187767.
Stafford, Philip. 2018. The global age‐friendly community movement: a critical appraisal (Vol. 5). New York: Berghahn Books. 286 pp. Pb.: US$135.00. ISBN: 9781785336676.
Verdery, Katherine. 2018. My life as a spy: investigations in a secret police file. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. 344 pp. Pb.: US$28.95. ISBN: 978‐0‐8223‐7066‐6.
ERRATUM
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CORRIGENDUM
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