Crisis Futures: COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History

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Crisis Futures : COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History. / Kaur, Ravinder.

In: Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought, Vol. 12, No. 3-4, 2022, p. 641–658.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kaur, R 2022, 'Crisis Futures: COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History', Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought, vol. 12, no. 3-4, pp. 641–658. https://doi.org/10.1332/204378921X16377682724614

APA

Kaur, R. (2022). Crisis Futures: COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History. Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought, 12(3-4), 641–658. https://doi.org/10.1332/204378921X16377682724614

Vancouver

Kaur R. Crisis Futures: COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History. Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought. 2022;12(3-4):641–658. https://doi.org/10.1332/204378921X16377682724614

Author

Kaur, Ravinder. / Crisis Futures : COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History. In: Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought. 2022 ; Vol. 12, No. 3-4. pp. 641–658.

Bibtex

@article{3607b50892c142099ba25b689aee06b0,
title = "Crisis Futures: COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History",
abstract = "Covid-19 was widely pitched as a potential turning point of history, a rare crisis-as-opportunity by political leaders and policymakers. This claim of being at a revolutionary threshold, an exceptional time in history, and capitalising upon that claim to reshape the political-economic landscape is at the core of the speculative politics of crisis, or what I call crisis futures. COVID-19 was widely pitched as a potential turning point of history, a rare crisis-as-opportunity by political leaders and policymakers. Critical in this future-oriented discourse, I argue, is how time is invoked as a good in short supply, a precious opportunity, albeit one that can only be availed within a restricted period. This temporal limitation is what accrues speculative value to the crisis: the urgency to accelerate the desired change and to suspend any opposition to that change. Grounded in the event of the COVID-19 lockdown in India, the article unpacks multiple scales and speeds – of acceleration and slowdowns – that constitute the edifice of crisis futures. It traces how the pandemic crisis was capitalised on by the state, at once, to consolidate India as a commercial enclosure for global capital, as well as a cultural enclosure for Hindu majoritarianism. It asks what precisely is accelerated and what is put on hold, and which events or goals are turned into exceptions within an exceptional moment, such as a pandemic. Finally, the article looks at the modes of {\textquoteleft}im-mediation{\textquoteright} – mass-mediated communication and the activation of pandemic publics – which underpin the politics of crisis futures.",
author = "Ravinder Kaur",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1332/204378921X16377682724614",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "641–658",
journal = "Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought",
issn = "2043-7897",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",
number = "3-4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Crisis Futures

T2 - COVID-19 and the Speculative Turning Point of History

AU - Kaur, Ravinder

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Covid-19 was widely pitched as a potential turning point of history, a rare crisis-as-opportunity by political leaders and policymakers. This claim of being at a revolutionary threshold, an exceptional time in history, and capitalising upon that claim to reshape the political-economic landscape is at the core of the speculative politics of crisis, or what I call crisis futures. COVID-19 was widely pitched as a potential turning point of history, a rare crisis-as-opportunity by political leaders and policymakers. Critical in this future-oriented discourse, I argue, is how time is invoked as a good in short supply, a precious opportunity, albeit one that can only be availed within a restricted period. This temporal limitation is what accrues speculative value to the crisis: the urgency to accelerate the desired change and to suspend any opposition to that change. Grounded in the event of the COVID-19 lockdown in India, the article unpacks multiple scales and speeds – of acceleration and slowdowns – that constitute the edifice of crisis futures. It traces how the pandemic crisis was capitalised on by the state, at once, to consolidate India as a commercial enclosure for global capital, as well as a cultural enclosure for Hindu majoritarianism. It asks what precisely is accelerated and what is put on hold, and which events or goals are turned into exceptions within an exceptional moment, such as a pandemic. Finally, the article looks at the modes of ‘im-mediation’ – mass-mediated communication and the activation of pandemic publics – which underpin the politics of crisis futures.

AB - Covid-19 was widely pitched as a potential turning point of history, a rare crisis-as-opportunity by political leaders and policymakers. This claim of being at a revolutionary threshold, an exceptional time in history, and capitalising upon that claim to reshape the political-economic landscape is at the core of the speculative politics of crisis, or what I call crisis futures. COVID-19 was widely pitched as a potential turning point of history, a rare crisis-as-opportunity by political leaders and policymakers. Critical in this future-oriented discourse, I argue, is how time is invoked as a good in short supply, a precious opportunity, albeit one that can only be availed within a restricted period. This temporal limitation is what accrues speculative value to the crisis: the urgency to accelerate the desired change and to suspend any opposition to that change. Grounded in the event of the COVID-19 lockdown in India, the article unpacks multiple scales and speeds – of acceleration and slowdowns – that constitute the edifice of crisis futures. It traces how the pandemic crisis was capitalised on by the state, at once, to consolidate India as a commercial enclosure for global capital, as well as a cultural enclosure for Hindu majoritarianism. It asks what precisely is accelerated and what is put on hold, and which events or goals are turned into exceptions within an exceptional moment, such as a pandemic. Finally, the article looks at the modes of ‘im-mediation’ – mass-mediated communication and the activation of pandemic publics – which underpin the politics of crisis futures.

U2 - 10.1332/204378921X16377682724614

DO - 10.1332/204378921X16377682724614

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 641

EP - 658

JO - Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought

JF - Global Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought

SN - 2043-7897

IS - 3-4

ER -

ID: 285388100