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In the Haze
- Source :
- positions: asia critique. 28:447-479
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Duke University Press, 2020.
-
Abstract
- This article explores psychic experiences of air pollution and the ways these experiences have become narrated in various texts, especially but not exclusively those responding to one weekend in December 2013 when Shanghai purportedly experienced the highest levels of fine-particle, or PM2.5, pollution on record. This paper is also concerned, more generally, with processes associated with attempts to transform the messiness, or figurative haze, of fieldwork into an authoritative written account. These dual concerns—with air pollution and writing—are mutually informing since both seem to translate troubling, and often socially unacceptable, emotions into more presentable and tolerable forms. Through narrativization, namely acts of authorship and inscription, persons implicated in this article attempt to relieve, figuratively write over, or otherwise repress anxieties. While it is understandable, and perhaps even normal, to perpetuate such processes, this article argues we should engage rather than erase them since they not only animate persons and texts but also illuminate efforts to understand human responses to air pollution.
- Subjects :
- Cultural Studies
History
Haze
Literature and Literary Theory
Visual Arts and Performing Arts
05 social sciences
Air pollution
050401 social sciences methods
DUAL (cognitive architecture)
medicine.disease_cause
Literal and figurative language
050601 international relations
0506 political science
Psychic
0504 sociology
Aesthetics
medicine
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15278271 and 10679847
- Volume :
- 28
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- positions: asia critique
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........03de392b04364df5ed439de04632ec87
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1215/10679847-8112503