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Original Artikel |
Datum |
Titel |
Autoren Alle Autoren |
1 |
[GO] |
2022―Nov―08 |
More than just ‘working from home’: domestic space, economies and living infrastructures during and beyond pandemic times |
Tania Lewis, Indigo Holcombe-James, Andrew Glover |
2 |
[GO] |
2022―Jun―16 |
Dancing with Coronaspheres: Expanded Breath Bodies and the Politics of Public Movement in the Age of COVID-19 |
Kate Elswit |
3 |
[GO] |
2022―Apr―07 |
Affect, Protest, Pandemic: Conversations from the crises of 2020 |
Elizabeth Davis, Megan Boler |
4 |
[GO] |
2022―Apr―07 |
The biopolitics of pandemics: interview with Ed Cohen |
Ed Cohen, Megan Boler, Elizabeth Davis |
5 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Bio or Zoe?: dilemmas of biopolitics and data governmentality during COVID-19 |
Yeran Kim |
6 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Following the science? Covid-19, ‘race’ and the politics of knowing |
John Clarke |
7 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
COVID-19 and ‘crisis as ordinary’: pathological whiteness, popular pessimism, and pre-apocalyptic cultural studies |
Josh Smicker |
8 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
COVID-19 and the affective politics of congestion: an exploration of population density debates in Australia |
Sukhmani Khorana |
9 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Covid-19 and the mundane practices of privilege |
Kumarini Silva |
10 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
COVID-19 at sea: ‘the world as you know it no longer exists’ |
Christiaan De Beukelaer |
11 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Mistranslation as disinformation: COVID-19, global imaginaries, and self-serving cosmopolitanism |
Sheng Zou |
12 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Doing cultural studies in rough seas: the COVID-19 ocean multiple |
Elspeth Probyn |
13 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Racism is a public health crisis! Black Power in the COVID-19 pandemic |
Lisa B. Y. Calvente |
14 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Back to the future: lessons of a SARS hysteria for the COVID-19 pandemic |
Allen Chun |
15 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Introduction: COVID-19, the multiplier |
John Nguyet Erni, Ted Striphas |
16 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
The epiphanic moments of COVID-19: the revelation of painful national truths |
Mette Hjort |
17 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Predicting Covid-19: wearable technology and the politics of solutionism |
James N. Gilmore |
18 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Religion and urban political eco/pathology: exploring communalized coronavirus in South Asia |
Asif Mehmood, Sajjad Hasnain, Muhammad Azam |
19 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Parodies for a pandemic: coronavirus songs, creativity and lockdown |
Jon Stratton |
20 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Zombie capitalism and coronavirus time |
Elmo Gonzaga |
21 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
No time for fun: the politics of partying during a pandemic |
Nicholas Holm |
22 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
The long and deadly road: the covid pandemic and Indian migrants |
Raka Shome |
23 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
The spectacle of competence: global pandemic and the redesign of leadership in a post neo-liberal world |
Leon Gurevitch |
24 |
[GO] |
2021―Mai―05 |
Collective disorientation in the pandemic conjuncture |
Alexander J. Means, Graham B. Slater |
25 |
[GO] |
2021―Mrz―15 |
Enduring COVID-19, nevertheless |
Rebecca A. Adelman |
26 |
[GO] |
2021―Mrz―10 |
Learning From Lana: Netflix’s Too Hot to Handle, COVID-19, and the human-nonhuman entanglement in contemporary technoculture |
Fan Yang |
27 |
[GO] |
2021―Mrz―10 |
Everyday life and the management of risky bodies in the COVID-19 era |
Jeffrey A. Bennett |