Projects
Pandemics and Coloniality: Biopolitical Entanglements in Early Modern Chronicles and COVID-19 Narratives
Beginning of funding
09.12.2020
End of funding
09.05.2022
This project's key question asks how structures of coloniality are inherent to COVID-19 narratives, and how their biopolitical mechanisms relate to early colonial accounts of disease. As a key result, the project will provide a rich set of qualitative scientific data on biopolitical entanglements between early modern and contemporary language of pandemics. The key impact will be a historic understanding on COVID-19's globalized, unequal knowledge-power, which further stimulates a transformation of the research field of early colonial illness.
Source of description: Information from the provider
Fields of research
Postcolonial studies, Literature and philosophy, Literature and natural science, Literature of the 18th century, Literature of the 19th century, Literature of the 20th century, Literature of the 21st centuryLinks
Contact
Institutions
Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Neuphilologie
Romanisches Seminar
Addresses
Wilhelmstr. 50
72074 Tübingen
Germany