This paper argues for the concept of viral forgetting to understand how and why the lessons of HIV are not easy to remember in the context of COVID. Building on recently drawn analogies between the two epidemics, we argue that new normative injunctions to ‘flatten the curve’ and ‘stay at home’ individualise responses to COVID that make memory of the first decade of HIV vital in recent viral times. Individualistic responses, including those that bind individuals to social identity groups, obscure the ways in which effective care for others and the self requires a recognition of the partiality of community, the inevitability of vulnerability, and a complex interpretation of scientific evidence and human ontology. We draw on Eve Sedgwick’s th...
This paper examines a specific form of mass media memory of the 1918 influenza pandemic during the C...
The COVID-19 pandemic has unleashed positive and negative aspects of human behaviour. From the Black...
This paper examines the sometimes implicit models of human behaviour circulating in science, governm...
© 2023 The Authors. Published by British Medical Journal. This is an open access article available u...
What is viral law? In order to being my discussion, I note that the last two years have been extreme...
Political leaders have commonly used the phrase ‘learn to live with the virus’ to explain to citizen...
Globally, more than 4 million people have been infected with COVID-19, and more than 300,000 deaths ...
It is March, and one year ago we were unexpectedly ushered into a global pandemic that shut down our...
How does individual trauma influence collective memory? Within queer communities, key social institu...
In April 2020, just months into the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pan...
For many, COVID-19 feels like the first, massive, life-threatening epidemic of infectious disease th...
In this study, we expand on the newly devised sociological concept of pandemic practices that emerge...
In this paper, we contrast two emergences of the concept of ‘uninfectious’ (that pharmaceuticals can...
The outbreak of Covid-19 is billed as a ‘once in a century event’. It has appeared as the prophesise...
Belonging to the retrovision genre, It’s a Sin (2021) dramatizes the early years of the pandemic. Au...
This paper examines a specific form of mass media memory of the 1918 influenza pandemic during the C...
The COVID-19 pandemic has unleashed positive and negative aspects of human behaviour. From the Black...
This paper examines the sometimes implicit models of human behaviour circulating in science, governm...
© 2023 The Authors. Published by British Medical Journal. This is an open access article available u...
What is viral law? In order to being my discussion, I note that the last two years have been extreme...
Political leaders have commonly used the phrase ‘learn to live with the virus’ to explain to citizen...
Globally, more than 4 million people have been infected with COVID-19, and more than 300,000 deaths ...
It is March, and one year ago we were unexpectedly ushered into a global pandemic that shut down our...
How does individual trauma influence collective memory? Within queer communities, key social institu...
In April 2020, just months into the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pan...
For many, COVID-19 feels like the first, massive, life-threatening epidemic of infectious disease th...
In this study, we expand on the newly devised sociological concept of pandemic practices that emerge...
In this paper, we contrast two emergences of the concept of ‘uninfectious’ (that pharmaceuticals can...
The outbreak of Covid-19 is billed as a ‘once in a century event’. It has appeared as the prophesise...
Belonging to the retrovision genre, It’s a Sin (2021) dramatizes the early years of the pandemic. Au...
This paper examines a specific form of mass media memory of the 1918 influenza pandemic during the C...
The COVID-19 pandemic has unleashed positive and negative aspects of human behaviour. From the Black...
This paper examines the sometimes implicit models of human behaviour circulating in science, governm...