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‘We are doing better’: Biopolitical nationalism and the COVID-19 virus in East Asia

Jeroen de Kloet, Jian Lin, Yiu Fai Chow

2020European Journal of Cultural Studies104 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic stirs up strong nationalist and localist sentiments; places pride themselves on containing the virus more effectively: We are doing better. We call this ‘biopolitical nationalism’, understood by us as the dynamics between body, geopolitics and affect. When looking at mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong, we analyse how the biopolitical efforts of these places are being compared, applauded and supported. Under a discourse of life and survival, this celebration of biopolitical control does not fall into the classic reproduction of capital, but speaks to geopolitical identification. Biopolitics has morphed into a field of competition, of rivalry, of nationalistic – or, perhaps more generally, localist – power games. What can we do as Cultural Studies scholars?

Topics & Concepts

BiopowerNationalismGeopoliticsPower (physics)Mainland ChinaSociologyRivalryPolitical economyPolitical scienceGender studiesPoliticsChinaLawEconomicsQuantum mechanicsPhysicsMacroeconomicsBiomedical Ethics and RegulationRace, Genetics, and SocietyPosthumanist Ethics and Activism
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