Affective Activism and Digital Archiving: Relief Work and Migrant Workers during the Covid-19 Lockdown in India

被引:1
|
作者
Sriraman, Tarangini [1 ]
机构
[1] Goldsmiths Univ London, London, England
关键词
POLITICS;
D O I
10.1111/plar.12501
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
This article traces what I term the affective activism of volunteers, civil society organizations, and lorry drivers engaged in relief work to assist stranded migrant workers wanting to travel home during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic and national lockdown in India. I define affective activism as an archival practice that is driven by relief figures' affects of fear, anger, and aspirations-in this instance, toward their legal and administrative accountability to funders. Drawing on my ethnographic work in a relief network and using independent interviews I conducted, this article critically compares two modalities of digital archiving conducted by relief figures: collecting migrant workers' Aadhaar-unique biometric number identifiers issued to Indians-and digitally archiving their relief efforts through videos, voice-notes, and WhatsApp Messenger screenshots. I argue that relief figures expressed their anxieties in the form of talismanic beliefs that records of Aadhaar and their material infrastructure would keep safe the migrant workers they were trying to help. Alternately, and sometimes, concomitantly, they performatively deployed Whatsapp artifacts to support their accountability in the face of bureaucratic and political specters. Both forms highlight the desire of relief figures to exceed paper forms and state practices in their archival impulses. [affective activism, India relief work, Covid-19 lockdown, migrant workers, digital archiving, and visual politics]
引用
收藏
页码:224 / 239
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Social work education: Reflections during Covid-19 lockdown
    Glubb-Smith, Kelly J.
    Roberts, Tania
    AOTEAROA NEW ZEALAND SOCIAL WORK, 2020, 32 (02): : 46 - 48
  • [32] COVID-19 at the workplace No evidence for an effect of the first COVID-19 lockdown on work stress conditions in office workers
    Aegerter, Andrea Martina
    Deforth, M.
    Johnston, V.
    Sjogaard, G.
    Luomajoki, H.
    Volken, T.
    Distler, O.
    Dressel, H.
    Melloh, M.
    Elfering, A.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 31
  • [33] HEALTHY HABITS IN CSIC WORKERS DURING COVID-19 LOCKDOWN IN SPAIN
    De Diego, Elena H.
    Zapatera, Belen
    Frias, Juana
    Gomez-Martinez, Sonia
    ARBOR-CIENCIA PENSAMIENTO Y CULTURA, 2022, 198 (806)
  • [34] THE SOUND OF SILENCE, THE FACE OF FACELESS: THE ORDEAL OF MIGRANT WORKERS IN INDIA DURING THE FIRST WAVE OF COVID-19
    Rizvi, Nuzhat F.
    Kalnawat, Aarti
    Nair, Rakesh
    RUSSIAN LAW JOURNAL, 2022, 10 (04) : 24 - 33
  • [35] To Work or Not to Work, That Is the Question: The Psychological Impact of the First COVID-19 Lockdown on the Elderly, Healthcare Workers, and Virtual Workers
    Andreassi, Silvia
    Monaco, Silvia
    Salvatore, Sergio
    Sciabica, Gaetano Maria
    De Felice, Giulio
    Petrovska, Elena
    Mariani, Rachele
    HEALTHCARE, 2021, 9 (12)
  • [37] The psychological impact of COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown on the migrant workers: A cross-sectional survey
    Kumar, Krishan
    Mehra, Aseem
    Sahoo, Swapnajeet
    Nehra, Ritu
    Grover, Sandeep
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, 2020, 53
  • [38] "Affective Publics" Performing Trust on Danish Twitter during the COVID-19 Lockdown
    Breslin, Samantha
    Blok, Anders
    Enggaard, Thyge Ryom
    Gardhus, Tobias
    Pedersen, Morten Axel
    CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY, 2022, 63 (02) : 211 - 218
  • [39] Migrant sex workers left behind during COVID-19 pandemic
    Lam, Elene
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE, 2020, 111 (04): : 482 - 483
  • [40] Migrant sex workers left behind during COVID-19 pandemic
    Elene Lam
    Canadian Journal of Public Health, 2020, 111 : 482 - 483