Dolezal Luna, Rose Arthur
Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health, University of Exeter, Queen's Building, Queen's Drive, Exeter, EX4 4QH UK.
Phenomenol Cogn Sci. 2023 Jan 21;22(5):1-19. doi: 10.1007/s11097-023-09890-6.
In this paper, we analyse the particular phenomena of COVID-19 pandemic shaming. We examine Sartre's account of the undifferentiated other in the experience of 'the look', and his insistence on shame as a foundational relational affect, in order to give a robust theoretical frame to understand how pandemic shaming circulated both online and offline, in targeted and diffuse manners. We focus on two features of pandemic shaming. First, we draw attention to the structural necessity of an audience in acts of pandemic shaming, where the shamer acts on behalf of a community of others, the audience, to perform and enforce a set of standards, values or norms. We turn to the we-experience and collective emotions literature and discuss how the shamer believes themselves to be 'speaking' on behalf of a community who share their outrage along with their values. Second, we discuss how the presumption of a collective emotion was frequently mistaken in acts of pandemic shaming, where shaming frequently led to shame backlashes, where the audience revealed themselves not to share the emotion and values of the shamer, consequently shaming the shamer. We argue that Jean-Paul Sartre's voyeur example is usefully illustrative of the tripartite structure of (1) shamed, (2) shamer and (3) shamer of the shamer that occurs in iterative processes of pandemic shaming, which are accompanied by shaming backlashes. We conclude by reflecting on the socio-historical context for Sartre's accounts of shame and 'the look', namely the German occupation of Paris and Sartre's experience of the French Resistance movement, and how these yield a particular socio-historical framing that makes evident how the extraordinary pseudo-wartime conditions of COVID-19 rendered atmospheres of distrust and suspicion prevalent.
在本文中,我们分析了新冠疫情污名化的特殊现象。我们审视了萨特对“注视”体验中无差别他者的描述,以及他对羞耻作为一种基本关系情感的坚持,以便给出一个有力的理论框架,来理解疫情污名化如何以有针对性和扩散的方式在网上和网下传播。我们聚焦于疫情污名化的两个特征。首先,我们提请注意在疫情污名化行为中受众的结构性必要性,在这种行为中,羞辱者代表其他人群体(即受众)行事,以执行并强化一套标准、价值观或规范。我们参考“我们”的体验和集体情感相关文献,讨论羞辱者如何认为自己是在代表一个与他们有共同愤怒及价值观的群体“发声”。其次,我们讨论在疫情污名化行为中,集体情感的假定常常是错误的,在这些行为中,污名化常常导致污名化的反弹,即受众表明自己并不认同羞辱者的情感和价值观,从而反过来羞辱羞辱者。我们认为让 - 保罗·萨特的窥淫癖者例子有助于说明在疫情污名化的迭代过程中出现的三方结构:(1)被羞辱者、(2)羞辱者以及(3)羞辱者的羞辱者,这些过程伴随着污名化的反弹。我们通过反思萨特关于羞耻和“注视”描述的社会历史背景来得出结论,即德国对巴黎的占领以及萨特在法国抵抗运动中的经历,以及这些如何产生一种特殊的社会历史框架,从而揭示出新冠疫情时期特殊的准战时状况是如何使不信任和猜疑的氛围盛行的。