Pandemic ripples: Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture

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Pandemic ripples : Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture. / Schwalbe, Daria Morgounova.

5 s. 2023, Blog .

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskning

Harvard

Schwalbe, DM 2023, Pandemic ripples: Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture.. <https://cultmind.ku.dk/research/covid-19-and-global-mental-health/blog/pandemic-ripples/>

APA

Schwalbe, D. M. (2023, apr. 12). Pandemic ripples: Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture. https://cultmind.ku.dk/research/covid-19-and-global-mental-health/blog/pandemic-ripples/

Vancouver

Schwalbe DM. Pandemic ripples: Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture. 2023. 5 s.

Author

Schwalbe, Daria Morgounova. / Pandemic ripples : Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture. 2023. 5 s.

Bibtex

@misc{5d56750e2949458aa9d54f1a79a9b002,
title = "Pandemic ripples: Scrutinizing Arctic communities{\textquoteright} perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture",
abstract = "In this blog I will address such questions as: {\textquoteleft}How to explain degrees of distress and violence in the Arctic, even though the pandemic was not very widespread there?{\textquoteright} {\textquoteleft}Could any long-term psychological consequences of the pandemic on Arctic communities have actually been overlooked?{\textquoteright} and if so, How do we address these issues without further damage of the Inuit people. I also touch upon the concept of “silent culture” (in Danish, tavshedskulturen), scrutinizing the prevailing contradictory views of the {\textquoteleft}Inuit culture{\textquoteright} as both the key protective factor and a major obstacle to heathier life in the Arctic. I argue that western-centric idea of silent culture and the essentializing culture-focused research are both problematic, nor do they shake the very fundamental assumption: that western ideas are the only rational ones and the only ideas which can make sense of the world, of reality, of social life and of human beings.",
author = "Schwalbe, {Daria Morgounova}",
year = "2023",
month = apr,
day = "12",
language = "English",
type = "Other",

}

RIS

TY - ICOMM

T1 - Pandemic ripples

T2 - Scrutinizing Arctic communities’ perspectives on COVID-19 and mental health – A case against damage-culture

AU - Schwalbe, Daria Morgounova

PY - 2023/4/12

Y1 - 2023/4/12

N2 - In this blog I will address such questions as: ‘How to explain degrees of distress and violence in the Arctic, even though the pandemic was not very widespread there?’ ‘Could any long-term psychological consequences of the pandemic on Arctic communities have actually been overlooked?’ and if so, How do we address these issues without further damage of the Inuit people. I also touch upon the concept of “silent culture” (in Danish, tavshedskulturen), scrutinizing the prevailing contradictory views of the ‘Inuit culture’ as both the key protective factor and a major obstacle to heathier life in the Arctic. I argue that western-centric idea of silent culture and the essentializing culture-focused research are both problematic, nor do they shake the very fundamental assumption: that western ideas are the only rational ones and the only ideas which can make sense of the world, of reality, of social life and of human beings.

AB - In this blog I will address such questions as: ‘How to explain degrees of distress and violence in the Arctic, even though the pandemic was not very widespread there?’ ‘Could any long-term psychological consequences of the pandemic on Arctic communities have actually been overlooked?’ and if so, How do we address these issues without further damage of the Inuit people. I also touch upon the concept of “silent culture” (in Danish, tavshedskulturen), scrutinizing the prevailing contradictory views of the ‘Inuit culture’ as both the key protective factor and a major obstacle to heathier life in the Arctic. I argue that western-centric idea of silent culture and the essentializing culture-focused research are both problematic, nor do they shake the very fundamental assumption: that western ideas are the only rational ones and the only ideas which can make sense of the world, of reality, of social life and of human beings.

M3 - Net publication - Internet publication

ER -

ID: 346142635