Talking and Acting A Pandemic Ethnography of COVID-19 in Montmartre

Author:

Black AlexisORCID

Abstract

Informed by eighteen months of ethnographic fieldwork in Montmartre, one of the last village-like neighbourhoods in Paris, in this paper, I analyze how people in this community talked through and acted out the COVID-19 pandemic. Using theoretical frameworks from linguistic, cognitive and medical anthropology, I examine “small stories” (Georgakopoulou 2007) about COVID-19, in particular, the analogical and conceptual aspects of this talk. How do people construct understandings of crisis as it evolves? What does this process look like when talk becomes action and reaction and what does it say about the future? This paper explores how people employed analogy, cultural scripts and other linguistic wor(l)d-building tools in their talk about their experiences and comprehensions of COVID-19. Following the arguments of Ochs (2012), I propose that talking about COVID-19 is itself an experience of the virus, an experience that informs people’s understandings of their present circumstances and future possibilities.

Publisher

University of Victoria Libraries

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology

Reference23 articles.

1. Black, Steven P. 2021a. “Portable Values, Inequities, and Techno-Optimism in Global Health Storytelling.” Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 31 (1): 25–42. https://anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jola.12297.

2. ——. 2021b. “Linguistic Anthropology and COVID-19.” Anthropology News website, 26 March. Accessed 6 August 2021. https://www.anthropology-news.org/articles/linguistic-anthropology-and-covid-19/.

3. Blommaert, Jan. 2020. “The coronavirus crisis of 2020 and Globalization.” Diggit Magazine, 3 December. Accessed 6 August 2021. https://www.diggitmagazine.com/column/coronavirus-globalization.

4. Briggs, Charles L. 2002. “Why Nation States and Journalists Can’t Teach People to Be Healthy.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 17 (3): 287–321. https://doi.org/10.1525/maq.2003.17.3.287.

5. Davies, Christie. 1982. “Sexual Taboos and Social Boundaries.” American Journal of Sociology 87 (5): 1032–1063. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2778417.

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