Louisiana State University, USA.
State University of Campinas, Brazil.
Soc Stud Sci. 2020 Oct;50(5):707-727. doi: 10.1177/0306312720927781. Epub 2020 Jun 29.
Epidemics have traditionally been viewed as the widespread occurrence of infectious disease within a community, or a sudden increase above what is typical. But modern epidemics are both more and less than the diffusion of viral entities. We argue that epidemics are 'fire objects', using a term coined by Law and Singleton: They generate locative fears through encounters that focus attention on entities that are unknown or imprecisely known, transforming spaces and humans into indeterminate dangers, alternating appearance and absence. The Ebola epidemic of 2014 had more complex impacts than the number of infections would suggest. We employ multi-sited qualitative interviews to argue that fear is the essence of modern global epidemics. In the discussion we contrast Ebola with both the Zika epidemic that followed and the ongoing coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
传染病通常被视为在社区内广泛发生的传染病,或者是突然超过典型水平的增加。但现代传染病不仅仅是病毒实体的传播。我们认为,传染病是“火的物体”,使用的是 Law 和 Singleton 创造的一个术语:它们通过关注未知或不精确了解的实体的遭遇产生定位恐惧,将空间和人类转变为不确定的危险,交替出现和消失。2014 年的埃博拉疫情的影响比感染人数所表明的要复杂得多。我们采用多地点定性访谈的方法来论证,恐惧是现代全球传染病的本质。在讨论中,我们将埃博拉与随后的寨卡疫情和持续的冠状病毒(COVID-19)大流行进行了对比。