Neoliberal and pandemic subjectivation processes: Clapping and singing as affective (re)actions during the Covid-19 home confinement
- PMID: 35462783
- PMCID: PMC9013200
- DOI: 10.1016/j.emospa.2022.100882
Neoliberal and pandemic subjectivation processes: Clapping and singing as affective (re)actions during the Covid-19 home confinement
Abstract
During the Covid-19 pandemic, the restriction of free movement and the sheltering-in-place became worldwide strategies to manage the virus spread. Especially at the beginning of the pandemic, community-based affective events helped people feel less isolated and support each other. In this manuscript, we explore how two of these social practices-clapping and singing-were useful to counter the emotions entailed in the subjectivation processes that accompanied the pandemic. We then argue that, seen as affective happenings, singing and clapping heightened emotions and affects that were already implicit in neoliberalism, mainly anxiety, loneliness, and a sense of precariousness, disposability, and inadequacy. On one hand, singing and clapping were liberatory practices of solidarity and resistance against the changes induced by the pandemic and its biopolitics. On the other hand, they contributed to the primary narratives on social resilience, docile bodies, and biopolitics that informed the crisis management. Singing and clapping also operated as neoliberal technologies of the self by bringing the focus on individual agency, behavioral control, and the sacrifice of specific subjects (e.g., the healthcare workers described as heroes). In short, singing and clapping were affective happenings that instantiated an entanglement of subjectivation practices in which the power to affect and the power to resist coincided.
Keywords: Affect theory; Biopolitics; Neoliberalism; Pandemic; Subjectivation.
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Similar articles
-
Governing the resilience of neoliberalism through biopolitics.Eur J Int Relat. 2017 Sep;23(3):489-512. doi: 10.1177/1354066116676321. Epub 2016 Nov 21. Eur J Int Relat. 2017. PMID: 29278249 Free PMC article.
-
Clapping for carers in the Covid-19 crisis: Carers' reflections in a UK survey.Health Soc Care Community. 2022 Jul;30(4):1442-1449. doi: 10.1111/hsc.13474. Epub 2021 Jun 14. Health Soc Care Community. 2022. PMID: 34125450 Free PMC article.
-
For the love of love: neoliberal governmentality, neoliberal melancholy, critical intersectionality, and the advent of solidarity with the other Mormons.J Homosex. 2012;59(7):912-37. doi: 10.1080/00918369.2012.699830. J Homosex. 2012. PMID: 22925052
-
Singing for People with Advance Chronic Respiratory Diseases: A Qualitative Meta-Synthesis.Biomedicines. 2022 Aug 26;10(9):2086. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines10092086. Biomedicines. 2022. PMID: 36140187 Free PMC article. Review.
-
Resilience strategies to manage psychological distress among healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic: a narrative review.Anaesthesia. 2020 Oct;75(10):1364-1371. doi: 10.1111/anae.15180. Epub 2020 Jul 3. Anaesthesia. 2020. PMID: 32534465 Free PMC article. Review.
References
-
- Adams G., Estrada-Villalta S., Sullivan D., Markus H.R. The psychology of neoliberalism and the neoliberalism of psychology. J. Soc. Issues. 2019;75:189–216. doi: 10.1111/josi.12305. - DOI
-
- Ahrens J. Theorising – praise of biopolitics? The covid-19 pandemic and the will for self-preservation | European sociologist. Eur. Soc. 2021;45(Issue) online first.
-
- Anonymous Stories of collective resistance in the context of hardship and crisis: an anonymous collective contribution from India during the pandemic crisis. Int. J. Narrat. Ther. Community Work. 2021:7–14.
-
- Arfken M. From resisting neoliberalism to neoliberalizing resistance. Theor. Psychol. 2018;28:684–693. doi: 10.1177/0959354318800393. - DOI
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources