Kutter, A. (forthcoming 2024). (De-)Politicising the borderland. Covid-fencing and crisis narratives of cultural workers at the Polish-German border. CADAAD journal, 16(1)
Vortrag von Amelie Kutter auf dem JURE-Workshop ‚Policitisations of pandemic recovery‘, 16 June, 2023, University of Helsinki. Unlike during earlier crises, the distributive effects of crisis and crisis management have not been subject of political constestation during the pandemic. What has primarily been contested is the legitimacy of national biopolitics, that is, the way by which public authorities seek to control for the health of a population in a given territory. The paper argues that the emphasis on self-determination vis-à-vis state authorities and the backgrounding of distributive effects of crisis management is related to the way the pandemic was constructed as a crisis in the first place and the specific type of political subjectivity – the responsible and resilient subject – that containment and recovery measures interpellated. This argument is drawn from discursive political studies, and a discourse conception of politicisation more specifically, which highlights the construction of political agency, opponency and voice previously unaccounted for in political competition (Kutter 2020).
Panel convened by Amelie Kutter at the ‚Critical Approaches to Discourse Analysis across Disciplines‘ (CADAAD) conference at University of Bergamo, Italy, on 6 July, 2022. Panelists:…
Am 20. Juli 2022, von 13.00 bis 14.00 Uhr, stellen wir den Krisen-Diskurs-Blog (CriDis) und seine Corona-Sonderausgabe am Viadrina Institut für Europa-Studien (IFES) auf Zoom vor. Kommen Sie / Kommt dazu…
This editorial introduces to the collection of blog posts on discourses of Covid-19 that were published in the first special issue of the Crisis Discourse Blog. The authors of the blog posts explore the repercussions the pandemic has had on ‘the political’, on what constitutes our political struggle and political identities in the pandemic era. They observe that Covid-19 has left a legacy in the ways in which we communicate, do and imagine politics.