Issue Details: First known date: 2024... 2024 Contagious Collaborators and Microbial Kin : Re-worlding in the Company of Infectious Agents beyond the COVID-19 Pandemic
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Exploring the incursion of SARS-2 COVID-19 into human cultures at the beginning of 2020, this paper investigates how microbial, and specifically viral, worlds might be positioned as beneficial companions in telling the stories of our times and radically reconfiguring what possible futures come next. While most intellectual efforts to understand COVID-19 have had the intention to control, suppress or eradicate it, approaching the pathogen through a posthumanist framework enables the consideration of what viral worlds might invite if approached as a collaborative agency, rather than adversary. How might thinking with and through COVID-19 reconfigure relations between human and non-human worlds in not just the present but also the future? Creating the opportunity for an experiential encounter with this question, Emissary 2920 (E2920) was a participatory, multiplatform, and pervasive two-week experience delivered to local audiences experiencing the rolling lockdowns of 2020 in Narrm/Melbourne. This work positioned participants as time-travelling emissaries from the future Institute of Human-Viral Relations who had volunteered to complete field work and gather experiential, sensory data from within the COVID-19 pandemic.' (Publication abstract)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Swamphen : A Journal of Cultural Ecology no. 10 March 2024 27671409 2024 periodical issue

    'Swamphen emerges from the air, lands and seas that form the stories of the First Peoples of Australia and Aotearoa. We attend to these communities’ narratives as a first principle. We acknowledge the unceded territories on which we and our contributors have worked to produce this issue of Swamphen. We pay our respects to those territories’ Elders, past and present, with an eye to our namesake, the swamphen (kwilom, milu, ping ping, Porphyrio melanotus, pukeko), a bird active in this region’s ground, skies and waters.'  Christine Howe, Alanna Myers, Robyn Maree Pickens, Sue Pyke : Editorial Note: Ngā Tohu o te Huarere)

    2024
Last amended 12 Mar 2024 07:13:20
Contagious Collaborators and Microbial Kin : Re-worlding in the Company of Infectious Agents beyond the COVID-19 Pandemicsmall AustLit logo Swamphen : A Journal of Cultural Ecology
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