
Pandemic Death Discourse
Denial, Disparity and the Promise of Communication
McFarland & Co Inc (Publisher)
Published on 7. April 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
254 pages
978-1-4766-8654-7 (ISBN)
Description
Since Covid-19 was declared a global pandemic, the virus has caused more than 1 million deaths in the United States and 7 million deaths worldwide. The rampant loss of life exposed fissures in healthcare systems, disrupted mourning rituals, complicated the bereavement process, and laid bare the inequities of death. Though much has been written on dying and death during COVID-19, this book is the first to attend to the communicative and representational practices through which meanings about loss during the pandemic are negotiated.
This book begins by addressing our collective death denial, and the institutional and ideological barriers that must be surmounted if we are to afford dignity and humanity to those who have been stripped of it. Against this backdrop, the authors examine an array of practices and channels through which various social groups have sought to dismantle oppressive structures, find hope amid despair, and reshape understandings of mortality, including what it means to be in community. COVID-19 has issued a challenge to our conscience and to our symbolic capacities, and this book is an earnest response to that challenge, one that is attuned to our collective vulnerabilities.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Jefferson, NC
United States
Illustrations
Halftones, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
421 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4766-8654-7 (9781476686547)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
M.F. Alvarez, PhD, is an assistant professor of communication at the University of New Hampshire and the author of two previous books. Carmen Hernández-Ojeda, PhD, is an independent scholar based in Spain who promotes performance autoethnography as a (self)decolonizing tool. Alexander B. Joy, PhD, is an independent scholar from New Hampshire. Gyuri S. Kepes, PhD, is a practicing artist, filmmaker, and assistant professor of communication at Landmark College in Putney, Vermont.
Content
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter 1.¿Necroeconomics Ain't Sexy: Contextualizing Neoliberal Silence on End of Life
Carmen Hernández-Ojeda
Chapter 2.¿My Body, My Choice: Internalized Misogyny, Faux Feminism and the Necropolitics of the Anti-Masking Movement
Gyuri Kepes
Chapter 3.¿What Is the Aesthetic of Covid?
Alexander B. Joy
Chapter 4.¿The Indispensably Disposable: Migrant Filipino Healthcare Workers and Covid-19
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter 5.¿"Help Me. I Can't Breathe": Black Lives Matter, Covid-19 and the Mortal Economy
Gyuri Kepes
Chapter 6.¿Technologies Beyond the Self: Im/mortality in the Age of the Retweet
Alexander B. Joy
Chapter 7.¿Mental Health and Suicide During Covid-19: Perspectives from an Online Community
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter 8.¿Avoiding End-of-Life Conversations in the Classroom During a Pandemic: A Professor's Firsthand Experience
Carmen Hernández-Ojeda
Chapter 9.¿Carriers and Transmissions: Teaching the Pandemic Through Film
Alexander B. Joy
Chapter 10.¿When Death Knocks on Classroom Doors: Reimagining (Post-)Pandemic Pedagogy
M.F. Alvarez and Gyuri Kepes
Afterword
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
About the Authors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter 1.¿Necroeconomics Ain't Sexy: Contextualizing Neoliberal Silence on End of Life
Carmen Hernández-Ojeda
Chapter 2.¿My Body, My Choice: Internalized Misogyny, Faux Feminism and the Necropolitics of the Anti-Masking Movement
Gyuri Kepes
Chapter 3.¿What Is the Aesthetic of Covid?
Alexander B. Joy
Chapter 4.¿The Indispensably Disposable: Migrant Filipino Healthcare Workers and Covid-19
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter 5.¿"Help Me. I Can't Breathe": Black Lives Matter, Covid-19 and the Mortal Economy
Gyuri Kepes
Chapter 6.¿Technologies Beyond the Self: Im/mortality in the Age of the Retweet
Alexander B. Joy
Chapter 7.¿Mental Health and Suicide During Covid-19: Perspectives from an Online Community
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter 8.¿Avoiding End-of-Life Conversations in the Classroom During a Pandemic: A Professor's Firsthand Experience
Carmen Hernández-Ojeda
Chapter 9.¿Carriers and Transmissions: Teaching the Pandemic Through Film
Alexander B. Joy
Chapter 10.¿When Death Knocks on Classroom Doors: Reimagining (Post-)Pandemic Pedagogy
M.F. Alvarez and Gyuri Kepes
Afterword
M.F. Alvarez
Chapter Notes
Bibliography
About the Authors
Index