Affiliation:
1. Salisbury University
2. City University of Hong Kong
Abstract
Abstract
In our contribution to this special issue on “Chronotopes & the COVID-19 Pandemic”, we discuss the
complexities of human survival and its dependence on collective learning. We argue that
collective learning – and thus survival – is a sociolinguistic phenomenon and lay out a fractal system in which the related
sociolinguistic processes play out. This system highlights the chronotopic-scalar situatedness of survival and captures the
material, textual, and imagined aspects of learning and meaning-making. Drawing on interactions among a small group of Iranian
migrants dealing with the effects of COVID-19, we discuss the processes through which participants dynamically construct and
update their chronotopic images of their new circumstances, as they interact with material and semiotic data coming from multiple
scales/centers. We show how the normative-semiotic indeterminacies caused by COVID-19 are navigated by social actors as they make
sense of their spatiotemporal surroundings in pursuit of material and ideological survival.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Cited by
3 articles.
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