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1.
Med Anthropol ; 40(7): 653-666, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1343541

ABSTRACT

The stigmatization of Senegalese return migrants as COVID-19 vectors by fellow Senegalese during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic troubles the self/other distinction that underpins the scholarly focus on epidemics and xenophobia and encourages the broader task of exploring epidemics and phobia. The casting of return migrants as COVID-19 vectors was influenced by longstanding ambivalence toward these migrants that had encouraged some Senegalese to seek to "confine" them to Europe long before the pandemic. Old preoccupations help us understand how Senegalese interpreted and deployed COVID-19 control and prevention measures like "confinement," lockdowns, and border closures.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Transients and Migrants , Anthropology, Medical , Communicable Disease Control , Humans , Pandemics , SARS-CoV-2 , Scapegoating
2.
Med Confl Surviv ; 36(4): 315-332, 2020 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1066132

ABSTRACT

This essay challenges generalizations since the late enlightenment about the effects of epidemics and pandemics on collective mentalities: that from antiquity to the present, epidemics, regardless of the disease, have sparked distrust, social violence, and the blaming of others. By contrast, the pandemic that killed the greatest numbers in world history-the Influenza of 1918-20 - was a pandemic of compassion. No one has yet to uncover this pandemic sparking collective violence or blaming any minorities for spreading the disease anywhere in the globe. The essay then explores the variety of charitable reactions and abnegation that cut across social divisions in communities from theatres of war in Europe to nations thousands of miles from the direct military encounters. Most remarkable, however, was the overflowing volunteerism of women, especially in the US, Canada, and Australia. To explain this widespread charitable reaction, the essay investigates the milieu of the First World War, showing how that context in domestic war settings was not conducive to risking life to aid total strangers, especially when those strangers came from different foreign countries classes, races, or religious faiths. I end with a reflection on the unfolding socio-psychological reactions to Covid-19 from the perspective of 1918-20.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/epidemiology , Empathy , Influenza, Human/history , Pandemics/history , COVID-19/psychology , Charities , Community Participation/history , Female , History, 20th Century , Humans , Influenza, Human/epidemiology , Influenza, Human/prevention & control , Influenza, Human/psychology , Male , Pandemics/prevention & control , Scapegoating , Volunteers , World War I
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