Back to the future: lessons of a SARS hysteria for the COVID-19 pandemic. (Special Issue: The cultural politics of COVID-19.)
Cultural Studies
; 35(2/3):585-597, 2021.
Article
in English
| GIM | ID: covidwho-1721875
ABSTRACT
During the COVID-19 global pandemic, Taiwan has been universally praised for its policy actions in preventing its initial outbreak there from Wuhan and for its strict measures in containing its communal spread locally. Memory of the SARS crisis played a major role, but people in Taiwan forget that SARS was initially considered a problem confined mostly to Hong Kong. Taiwanese did not seem urgently aware, until infections multiplied locally. Taiwan's health authorities eventually adopted a draconian quarantine policy, but mainly as a political tactic to contain the widespread panic, as though the dam had suddenly burst. In retrospect, the extremity and internal contradictions of the policy are remarkable, but they are instructive. The initial reaction of unprepared governments, most notably in the US, during COVID-19 mirrors this same ineptitude. Enabling hysteria and resorting to scapegoating were in turn diversions to cover up their inability to prevent a crisis. In the US, racism emerged, China and the WHO were blamed, people were even urged not to wear masks to avoid a run on short supplies. This is the tip of the political iceberg, if one adds tightened immigration and economic effects on the U.S. elections.
human diseases; pandemics; viral diseases; coronavirus disease 2019; neuroses; outbreaks; quarantine; racial discrimination; man; Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; Central Southern China; China; Hong Kong; Taiwan; USA; Homo; Hominidae; primates; mammals; vertebrates; Chordata; animals; eukaryotes; Severe acute respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus; Betacoronavirus; Coronavirinae; Coronaviridae; Nidovirales; positive-sense ssRNA Viruses; ssRNA Viruses; RNA Viruses; viruses; APEC countries; East Asia; Asia; high Human Development Index countries; upper-middle income countries; high income countries; South East Asia; North America; America; OECD Countries; very high Human Development Index countries; SARS-CoV-2; viral infections; People's Republic of China; Xianggang; neurosis; Formosa; United States of America
Full text:
Available
Collection:
Databases of international organizations
Database:
GIM
Language:
English
Journal:
Cultural Studies
Year:
2021
Document Type:
Article
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