[Xmca-l] Re: General check-in?

robsub@ariadne.org.uk robsub@ariadne.org.uk
Wed Apr 8 05:15:26 PDT 2020


I am self isolating in a cabin. Picture attached.

I have a cold. 99% certain it is not covid. Isolating because my family 
includes one member with no immune system.

Acutely aware of my privilege here in the UK. This cabin is my temporary 
home at the back of our property. Billions of people spend their entire 
lives in less.

In addition I have clean running water. And wifi.

I celebrated my birthday in isolation, hence the cards on the windowsill.

I have been able, from behind a closed door, to help set up my village's 
response to the crisis, which has been magnificent. We are very good in 
a crisis. But there will be enormous pressure, when the crisis has 
passed, to go back to the way things were - the pressure coming of 
course from those who benefit from the lethlly unfair way the world was 
run until a few weeks ago.

At a wider level, we are headed in the UK by a man who is brilliant at 
obtaining power and terrible at exercising it, who is now in hospital, 
most likely because of his own deliberate insouciance. He has left a 
power vacuum, not because he wielded a lot of power hiself, but because 
he is incapable of forming a functional collective.

Our planning for such an event has been vitiated by forty years of 
ruination of a once formidable civil service, and by twenty years of 
systematic underfunding and privatisation of the health service. And the 
knock on effects are widespread. Some new cancer patients are being told 
they will not be treated because of the effect of the pandemic. One 
report suggests that London has run out of dialysis machines - we are 
still coming to terms with the reality that covid19 does not just attack 
the lungs but can result in multi organ failure.

And yet I have to remember the many parts of the world where there is no 
cancer treatment and there are no dialysis machines to start with.

My master plan to spend my retirement becoming more familiar with 
Vygotsky, and perhaps contributing to the literature, is still stuck at 
step 1. I did manage to read recently Peter Smagorinsky's article on 
deconflating the ZPD and instructional scaffolding, which resonated a 
great deal with my thinking. Thank you, Peter. But my plan to write an 
activity theory based article on teaching and learning how to operate a 
dialysis machine remains on its three year hold.

Now I return to a thread in which a request for a translation of a 
decidedly lewd Albanian phrase has turned into a detailed and culturally 
sensitive discussion of the uses of the optative mood.

Good health, everyone, and stay distant.

Rob

On 08/04/2020 11:04, Carol Macdonald wrote:
> Hi Mary
>
> We do have one factor that may be helping us. Sorry I don't have the 
> url for this.
>
> Apparently countries where there is a widespread or universal 
> requirement for BCG vaccine seem to experience a lower level of 
> infection.
>
> South africa has a policy of BCG vaccination -- it's used for 
> resistance to TB, which of course in South Africa is a problem. This 
> helps people who contract HIV in resisting TB infection, but now it 
> seems to work the same in resisting COVID-19. The mechanism is not yet 
> clear.
>
> Otherwise I support your analysis, but want to emphasise that social 
> distancing is only possible for the upper working class and middle 
> class. It's not possible in slums and informal settlements.
>
> We await information from our President Cyril Ramaphosa as to whether 
> the lockdown is going to be extended from 16th April. while the 
> measures have been amongst the most severe in the world, they were put 
> in place "early" and so may pay dividends.
>
> Carol Macdonald
>
>
> ----------------------------
> Carol A Macdonald Ph.D (Edin)
> 082 562 1050
> Editlab.Net
> The Matthew Project: Reading to Learn
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, 8 Apr 2020 at 09:40, Mary van der Riet <VanDerRiet@ukzn.ac.za 
> <mailto:VanDerRiet@ukzn.ac.za>> wrote:
>
>     Hi everyone
>     Here is South Africa we are in lockdown until 16 April. This means
>     only trips to grocery shops, doctors and pharmacies. Unfortunately
>     no walking or exercise outside one's property.  This seems to have
>     slowed the infection rate 1749 cases and 13 deaths (58 million
>     population). Cases were initially related to international travel,
>     but are now also internal (health care workers, the elderly,
>     church goers. whether the lock down is extended is under review
>
>     Hotly contested issues are
>
>       * a restriction on the number of people allowed to travel in
>         mini-bus taxis - people need to travel to get to essential
>         service jobs, and to shop (apartheid planning still means that
>         people are far from city centres)
>       * whether a ban on cigarette and alcohol sales is
>         constitutional; a ban on buying anything non essential (the
>         topic today is whether baby clothes giving change in season
>         are now an essential item)
>       * the banning of religious events (we are coming up to Easter),
>         and ceremonies around funerals are restricted in size.
>         Hotspots of infection have been related to church gatherings.
>       * an increase in domestic and gender based violence incidence
>         (although an decline in overall crime figures)
>       * a concern that being restricted to one's 'home' is very
>         challenging for those living in informal settlements (shacks)
>         and living with many people in one space.
>       * a massive impact on small businesses and the informal economy
>         (which involves most of the SA population - street hawkers,
>         small 'spaza' shops (the government is trying to address this
>         through tax breaks, a fund that people can apply to, and
>         possibly increasing the social grant allocations  -
>         pensioners, child care grant etc)
>       * a loss of jobs as businesses retrench under lockdown
>       * conspiracy theories about how it is spread (at least two
>         arrests of people circulating fake information - such as the
>         nasal swab testing with an earbud is infecting people with the
>         virus - a video made by a white male). There seems to be an
>         anti-government stance developing in SA; including fake news
>         that 5G spreads Corona (a white male pastor saying this);
>         scams and hacking of social media are also occuring.
>         Government is making Whatsapp admin liable for the spread of
>         fake news in SA
>       * an increase in human rights violations by the defence force
>         and police ,and private security companies (abuse of people
>         who have flouted the lock down regulations). In the media I
>         have seen of these instances it feels as if this is unchecked.
>         Government response has been 'people must obey the rules and
>         report incidences of abuse'. There are echoes of armies in the
>         townships in the 70'and 80's and rather disturbing images. I
>         fear a return to a police state (surveillance is happening
>         through cell phones, we are asked to report on neighbours whom
>         we suspect have the virus, we are jailed if we escape lockdown
>         or resist testing)
>       * the policing, surveillance and criminalisation of the homeless
>         (who have been moved to temporary shelters)
>       * a real concern about the continuation of schooling and
>         university education. Most South Africans do not have internet
>         access - online and home schooling will be a problem both
>         because of lack of resources, but also because of lack of
>         space to study, lack of skills amongst parents to help;
>         teachers and lecturers are being asked to train themselves,
>         use resources etc, but they are also amongst the under-resourced
>       * most South Africans not having adequate access to proper
>         sanitation (water especially), this constraints health care
>         practices related to preventing the prevention such as
>         handwashing.
>       * most South Africans also cant afford masks or hand sanitisers
>       * lack of protective clothing for health care workers (there
>         have been protests about this, and the government does seem
>         to  be responding
>
>     (Im sure other SAfricans on the list could correct me and add to this)
>
>     It feels as if this is the relative calm before the storm. We dont
>     know what is going to happen. It is making people very anxious.
>     We have a huge population of people who are HIV positive. Many but
>     not all are using ARV treatment and this might help. Many  South
>     Africans also have TB, and not all are on treatment. These
>     conditions compromise the immune system and might make the spread
>     faster (once it gets into the general population). On the other
>     hand some of these health issues have allowed a mechanism for
>     increasing testing - there is now a roll out of testing using TB
>     health systems and community mobile services. These are being
>     directly at hotspots
>
>     On the more positive side, this situation seems to have united
>     political parties and shown  President Cyril Ramaphosa's
>     leadership skills .
>     And there is a proliferation of online cultural activity (see the
>     Centre for the less good idea - livestreaming premiers - really
>     good SA theatre) which I can now attend as I am 'at home'
>
>     Personally I am trying to manage the multiple tasks which come
>     from working from home, solo parenting, doing child care and house
>     care, whilst also managing my own existential anxiety. The
>     pressure to 'be productive' and 'use the time' and 'take a break'
>     are competing and contradictory, let alone take on online
>     teaching, train oneself up etc. I think there is an extreme burden
>     on women to hold the family fort, produce meals, entertain
>     children, keep the peace, and of course, work (like Newton  -
>     publish more, focus more). And there is 'online fatigue', a
>     wonderful expression that a friend used.
>
>     However, I'm also trying to explore ways to engage in research
>     online - constrained here in SA, and for qualitative research it
>     feels 'wrong' as it might only access the more wealthy, resourced
>     parts of our population.
>
>     I really appreciate the global community at this time. For example
>     the ISCHP listserve had a wonderful question about how to do
>     community and participatory research in this time and there were a
>     flood of responses. I also participated in a Zoom sessions of the
>     European Community Psychology Association and learnt a lot from
>     many of the Italians in the group.
>
>     But, we are ok. I keep telling myself it will be ok. I hope
>
>     best wishes
>
>     Mary
>
>
>
>
>
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     *From:* xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
>     <mailto:xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>     <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
>     <mailto:xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu>> on behalf of Andy
>     Blunden <andyb@marxists.org <mailto:andyb@marxists.org>>
>     *Sent:* Wednesday, 08 April 2020 02:25
>     *To:* xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu <mailto:xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>     <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu <mailto:xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>>
>     *Subject:* [Xmca-l] Re: General check-in?
>
>     Thanks for  summing up the situation here in Oz, John. I think you
>     are more connected than me. But it remains the case that we have
>     had 50 deaths from COVID-19 in a country of 25 million,
>     overwhelmingly from virus acquired overseas or directly traceable
>     to overseas cases.
>
>     This outcome corresponds to a transformation of the political
>     landscape is which unbelievable, but everything depends on how we
>     respond to these changes. So I call this not an "existential
>     crisis", but a world-/perezhivanie/. China may well return to
>     almost-normal but that is unlikely in the neo-liberal world. It is
>     impossible to predict what the outcome will be, but it will be a
>     self-transformation of the world activity.
>
>     Andy
>
>     ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>     *Andy Blunden*
>     Hegel for Social Movements
>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/h09GCP1JWRtKLn5khzfF74?domain=brill.com>
>     Home Page
>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/fUxrCQ1LgVtkwLNyuPXkVb?domain=ethicalpolitics.org>
>
>     On 8/04/2020 8:34 am, John Cripps Clark wrote:
>>
>>     Dear Helena and David
>>
>>     Here in Australia we have (after a shaky start with returning
>>     travellers not taking self-isolation seriously
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/XovKCRgBjWSv3XgzcP4lAE?domain=theage.com.au>
>>     and not quarantining cruise ship passengers) we seem to be
>>     following South Korea in containing the virus. The outcry over
>>     cruise ships has been revealing. There is a police investigation
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/84XKCVmZn1Fxp8PRhJ9nbh?domain=abc.net.au>
>>     into one of them (it did lead to over 600 new cases and a few
>>     deaths). The hysteria recalls Australia’s experience in the
>>     nineteenth century of epidemics
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/bQ8zCWnBo2f5n8yWumo2UQ?domain=dictionaryofsydney.org>
>>     and isolating ourselves from plague ships
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/oNm9CX6Vp3CXLZMzF9-1rg?domain=shop.sydneylivingmuseums.com.au>.
>>
>>
>>     As always it is the poor and disadvantaged that are suffering. We
>>     have tried to isolate the most vulnerable such as remote
>>     aboriginal  communities
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/y14ECY6Xq4CLyX64C3J2Yn?domain=abc.net.au>
>>     and it remains to see whether we will provide the resources
>>     necessary for these communities. Past experience is not
>>     encouraging since these communities would not be in the present
>>     state if we were serious about combatting disadvantage and
>>     poverty
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/iTGgCZ4Xr5C5WYopuNUUeJ?domain=theconversation.com>.
>>
>>     On a more parochial level, with extended shutdown and the
>>     universities under financial stress (partly this is our own fault
>>     by becoming dependent on overseas student fees
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/-vlFC1j735fMQXE9hm01LL?domain=campusmorningmail.com.au/>
>>     to supplement the steady erosion of government funding) we also
>>     need to support families with children who are cooped up together
>>     trying to juggle work, with childcare, with online education over
>>     the next two to ten months.
>>
>>     I think there are three ways in which we as, a relatively
>>     privileged, community of scholars can contribute:
>>
>>      1. Supporting our colleagues – we have unprecedently powerful
>>         communication technologies at our disposal – use them for
>>         good rather than evil. This is especially important in Africa
>>         and South America where the tidal wave (and I use this term
>>         advisedly recalling the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
>>         <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/o84CC2RJD6SpDQE9Uv0G5r?domain=journals.openedition.org>)
>>         is about to hit.
>>      2. Considering the influence of culture (it is in our title) on
>>         the worldwide response to Covid-19. David has already flagged
>>         the work unit as a unit of social organisation in China.
>>      3. We need to prepare for the post-Covid-19 bounceback once we
>>         have a vaccine. The existential crisis (and again I use the
>>         word with trepidation after the disastrous record of a former
>>         Prime Minister’s use of the adjective
>>         <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/o84CC2RJD6SpDQE9Uv0G5r?domain=journals.openedition.org>)
>>         we have is climate change and we can use the present crisis
>>         to delay or accelerate action. I have heard a frequent cry of
>>         “It will be different from now on” and history tells us that
>>         this is will not be true unless we make it so. There are
>>         powerful conservative forces (in Australia, U.S.A., Brazil
>>         etc.) who will try and use this crisis to increase the mining
>>         and use of hydrocarbons. As Martin said we are living in the
>>         Anthropocene and our success in rapidly reducing the
>>         production and sequestering atmospheric carbon dioxide that
>>         will determine our future far more than our confused response
>>         to Covid-19 (and future communicable diseases).
>>
>>     John
>>
>>     *From: *<xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>     <mailto:xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on behalf of David
>>     Kellogg <dkellogg60@gmail.com> <mailto:dkellogg60@gmail.com>
>>     *Reply-To: *"eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity"
>>     <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu> <mailto:xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>     *Date: *Wednesday, 8 April 2020 at 7:09 am
>>     *To: *"eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity"
>>     <xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu> <mailto:xmca-l@mailman.ucsd.edu>
>>     *Subject: *[Xmca-l] Re: General check-in?
>>
>>     Helena--
>>
>>     Situation in China, courtesy my sister-in-law: life in Beijing is
>>     pretty much back to normal at least on the face of it. People are
>>     going out to their work units (but there is more work from home
>>     than before the crisis). Classes still largely taught from ZOOM.
>>     My nephew is in Shanghai, where the situation is somewhat tighter
>>     (proximity to Wuhan). Wuhan opened up for real yesterday--people
>>     can leave (I lived there for two years in the mid-eighties, but I
>>     can barely recognize what I see on the news now....) I have
>>     students in Chengdu (who attend my class via ZOOM). People are
>>     mostly shopping on line with delivery to the gate of the housing
>>     unit rather than to their flat (as we do here in Korea). Air
>>     quality better than it's been in decades.
>>
>>     Situation here in South Korea: We just extended our lockdown for
>>     another two weeks. This is in response to a few days of new
>>     infections over a hundred, but the infections are mostly
>>     (80%) Koreans from the US and Europe who want to live in a place
>>     where the medical system has not broken down or is not in the
>>     process of breaking down. There are still some "hotspots" of
>>     community transmission, but these are almost all connected with
>>     churches or PC cafes. Schools reopen on the 16th, but only
>>     online. We have elections in a week, and there is a lot of
>>     campaigning going on, including the usual street based
>>     campaigning (the right wing opposition campaigns around the
>>     curious notion that the government has done absolutely nothing,
>>     and the government ignores everybody who is not an actual virus).
>>     People shop in stores, and there is no panic buying or disruption
>>     of supply chains. The main changes in economic life seem to have
>>     to do with transport, and it seems like this too will be
>>     permanent (electric scooters are everywhere now). Bowing instead
>>     of shaking hands is really not a bad idea, and
>>     coffee-shops always were over-rated and over-priced....
>>
>>     But what about you, Helena? (One of the things I have learned on
>>     this list is that you get more or less what you give--people tend
>>     to use what you write as a model for writing back!) Are you still
>>     in Vietnam? Your address says Berkeley and your email says
>>     Illinois--those are three very different venues for the virus and
>>     the economy. Can you give us a brief account of the situation in
>>     each?
>>
>>     Stay safe, wherever you are!
>>
>>
>>     David Kellogg
>>
>>     Sangmyung University
>>
>>     Book Review: 'Fees, Beets, and Music: A critical perusal of
>>     /Critical Pedagogy and Marx, Vygotsky and Freire: Phenomenal
>>     forms and educational action research /
>>
>>     in /Mind Culture and Activity/
>>
>>     /https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10749039.2020.1745847
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/NpbJC3lJV7CprvREUjJjOa?domain=tandfonline.com>/
>>
>>     Some free e-prints available at:
>>
>>     https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/QBBGIZNKAHPMM4ZVCWVX/full?target=10.1080/10749039.2020.1745847
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/EJYKC48KGgtBwx7vUzV4Du?domain=tandfonline.com>
>>
>>     New Translation with Nikolai Veresov: "L.S. Vygotsky's
>>     Pedological Works Volume One: Foundations of Pedology"
>>
>>     https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9789811505270
>>     <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/BTf8C580KjtZr1WDCAgtDN?domain=springer.com>
>>
>>     On Wed, Apr 8, 2020 at 4:30 AM Martin Packer <mpacker@cantab.net
>>     <mailto:mpacker@cantab.net>> wrote:
>>
>>         Hi Helena,
>>
>>         I share your concerns. And, despite its challenges, this
>>         situation seems a great opportunity to apply our distributed
>>         expertise(s). I tried to get some discussion going in a group
>>         concerned with the Anthropocene, but people seemed disinclined.
>>
>>         Martin
>>
>>         Here’s the first message that I sent…
>>
>>         The current situation is producing important evidence about
>>         the probable consequences of the strategies proposed to
>>         mitigate climate change. Satellites are showing significant
>>         reductions in pollution:
>>
>>         https://www.space.com/italy-coronavirus-outbreak-response-reduces-emissions-satellite-images.html
>>         <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/kUREC66VKkCr4JGBSDsTMo?domain=space.com>
>>
>>         Experts are suggesting that as a result the coronavirus may
>>         save more lives than it takes:
>>
>>         https://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffmcmahon/2020/03/11/coronavirus-lockdown-may-save-more-lives-from-pollution-and-climate-than-from-virus/#4a39bb3c5764
>>         <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/mQd3C76JVlCABYWJs4nkH-?domain=forbes.com>
>>
>>         So when skeptics ask “How can you know that reducing air
>>         travel will help with climate change?” there is now clear
>>         evidence with which to answer them.
>>
>>         Also in China:
>>
>>         https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2020/03/04/811019032/why-chinas-air-has-been-cleaner-during-the-coronavirus-outbreak
>>         <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/uVjPC8qYKmU6ygwKtV93yh?domain=npr.org>
>>
>>         At the same time, I am starting to wonder whether the current
>>         health guidelines regarding coronvirus are culturally biased.
>>         Can they work in ‘collectivist’ cultures (to use the
>>         shorthand)? The CDC guidelines, for example, include the
>>         recommendations to “Stay home when you are sick,” but also
>>         that other members of the household should “Avoid close
>>         contact with people who are sick” and should “Choose a room
>>         in your home that can be used to separate sick household
>>         members from those who are healthy. Identify a separate
>>         bathroom for the sick person to use, if possible.”
>>
>>         This advice is simply not practicable for many households in
>>         Colombia. There are not enough rooms; there is no second
>>         bathroom. In addition, many infants and young children here
>>         are cared for by grandparents, or even great-grandparents
>>         (many women here have a baby when young, so an infant may
>>         have a grandmother who is in her late 30s and a
>>         great-grandmother in her late 50s). The evidence shows that
>>         children don’t become very ill, but they do get infected and
>>         they can infect other people, among whom elderly caregivers
>>         will be the most at risk.
>>
>>         So I don’t think social distance and auto-quarantine will
>>         work in Colombia. Consider what the Chinese did: they went
>>         door-to-door to identify infected family members and removed
>>         them to massive collective quarantine setttings. People in
>>         the West considered this to be draconian, even cruel. But it
>>         made sense: much more cross-infection occurred in Chinese
>>         homes than in places like restaurants.
>>
>>         Unless the authorities can come up with strategies that are
>>         more appropriate to local circumstances and practices, there
>>         is likely to be a rapid and elevated peak of infections in
>>         Latin American countries.
>>
>>         And I see there is a related point here, on ageism:
>>
>>         https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/03/200313155256.htm
>>         <https://protect-za.mimecast.com/s/NZ11C98XYntkwjYpuwt4Zj?domain=sciencedaily.com>
>>
>>
>>
>>             On Apr 7, 2020, at 1:56 PM, Helena Worthen
>>             <helenaworthen@gmail.com
>>             <mailto:helenaworthen@gmail.com>> wrote:
>>
>>             Hello, XMCA-ers -
>>
>>             I don’t remember ever having read that this list was
>>             going to shut down or even be allowed to fade away. So
>>             now I’m writing, as if in the dark, to the whole list. 
>>             We’ve now got a major — maybe “the” major crisis of the
>>             anthropocene on our hands and the distant but connected
>>             network represented by the conversations on this list
>>             seem to me to be a treasure more precious than gold - and
>>             I’m not speaking metaphorically.
>>
>>             I am concerned about some of the people who have been
>>             pillars and resources on his list, people whom I have
>>             reached out to over the years and heard back from with
>>             information and perspectives that I would never have been
>>             able to access on my own. Where are you now? What are you
>>             doing? Are you safe and healthy? Do you have information
>>             about friends who are unable to read or respond to this
>>             request?
>>
>>             I hope to hear some responses to this message.
>>
>>             Take care of yourselves, please —
>>
>>             Helena
>>
>>             Helena Worthen
>>
>>             hworthen@illinois.edu <mailto:hworthen@illinois.edu>
>>
>>             21 San Mateo Road, Berkeley, CA 94707
>>
>>     /*
>>     Important Notice:* The contents of this email are intended solely
>>     for the named addressee and are confidential; any unauthorised
>>     use, reproduction or storage of the contents is expressly
>>     prohibited. If you have received this email in error, please
>>     delete it and any attachments immediately and advise the sender
>>     by return email or telephone.
>>
>>     Deakin University does not warrant that this email and any
>>     attachments are error or virus free./ 
>

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.ucsd.edu/pipermail/xmca-l/attachments/20200408/dc0d8767/attachment.html 
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: cabin_interior.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 91700 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : http://mailman.ucsd.edu/pipermail/xmca-l/attachments/20200408/dc0d8767/attachment.jpg 


More information about the xmca-l mailing list