Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia

Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, dystopian imaginaries have been used to describe both the threat posed by the virus and the public health restrictions implemented to contain its spread. They have fuelled panic buying and conspiracy theories, and have informed public discourse and governmen...

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Main Author: Sean Mark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2022-11-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/13330
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author Sean Mark
author_facet Sean Mark
author_sort Sean Mark
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description Since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, dystopian imaginaries have been used to describe both the threat posed by the virus and the public health restrictions implemented to contain its spread. They have fuelled panic buying and conspiracy theories, and have informed public discourse and government rhetoric. Dystopian works like 1984, The Eyes of Darkness, The Matrix and Black Mirror have been lauded for their foresight, while former health secretary, Matt Hancock, has stated that watching Contagion affected his planning of the vaccine rollout. This essay reflects on the relationship between dystopian cultures and Covid-19, examining, firstly, the role that figurations of dystopia have played in the collective and political response to the pandemic. Contextualising the British government’s handling of the crisis in the political culture of neoliberalism, the essay uses the concept of dystopia to underline the continuity of this response with the politics of the decade that preceded it – in the aborted pursuit of “herd immunity”, for example; the non-transparent conferment to private-sector companies, with little or no public health expertise, of contracts worth billions; and the authoritarian use of Covid legislation. The essay argues that it is the loss of impulses and discourses that challenge the status quo that marks the truly dystopian aspect of the pandemic. It explores, finally, the cultural implications of this, questioning the value we place on culture and the work we ask of it in times of crisis, and probing the political utility therein of the notion of dystopia.
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spelling doaj-art-08cf653aa75b495b93dbd9ae9f59777a2025-01-30T13:47:46ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022022-11-013210.4000/sillagescritiques.13330Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of DystopiaSean MarkSince the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic, dystopian imaginaries have been used to describe both the threat posed by the virus and the public health restrictions implemented to contain its spread. They have fuelled panic buying and conspiracy theories, and have informed public discourse and government rhetoric. Dystopian works like 1984, The Eyes of Darkness, The Matrix and Black Mirror have been lauded for their foresight, while former health secretary, Matt Hancock, has stated that watching Contagion affected his planning of the vaccine rollout. This essay reflects on the relationship between dystopian cultures and Covid-19, examining, firstly, the role that figurations of dystopia have played in the collective and political response to the pandemic. Contextualising the British government’s handling of the crisis in the political culture of neoliberalism, the essay uses the concept of dystopia to underline the continuity of this response with the politics of the decade that preceded it – in the aborted pursuit of “herd immunity”, for example; the non-transparent conferment to private-sector companies, with little or no public health expertise, of contracts worth billions; and the authoritarian use of Covid legislation. The essay argues that it is the loss of impulses and discourses that challenge the status quo that marks the truly dystopian aspect of the pandemic. It explores, finally, the cultural implications of this, questioning the value we place on culture and the work we ask of it in times of crisis, and probing the political utility therein of the notion of dystopia.https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/13330neoliberalismdystopiaCovid-19cultureausterity
spellingShingle Sean Mark
Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia
Sillages Critiques
neoliberalism
dystopia
Covid-19
culture
austerity
title Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia
title_full Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia
title_fullStr Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia
title_full_unstemmed Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia
title_short Pandemic Fictions: Covid-19 and the Cultures of Dystopia
title_sort pandemic fictions covid 19 and the cultures of dystopia
topic neoliberalism
dystopia
Covid-19
culture
austerity
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/13330
work_keys_str_mv AT seanmark pandemicfictionscovid19andtheculturesofdystopia