Affiliation:
1. City University of Hong Kong
Abstract
Abstract
In this article I apply the notions of chronotope and (re)chronotopization to
the case of grassroots, migrant domestic worker (MDW) led activism during the COVID-19 pandemic in Hong Kong. I compare the
chronotopes that are produced by the Hong Kong government with those produced by migrant-led organizations to understand how
migrants are marginalized and how they resist this marginalization. More specifically, I show how the spatiotemporal
configurations of “home,” “days off,” and “the time of COVID-19 in Hong Kong” are rechronotopized – that is, reimagined,
remoralized and rematerialized – through the discourses and actions of these grassroots organizations. I use this data and
analysis to reflect on how the notion of rechronotopization can account for the social processes involved in activism more
broadly; and to draw attention to the dialectic relationship between differently scaled chronotopic materialities and morally
loaded chronotopic imaginaries.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Cited by
1 articles.
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