000150026 001__ 150026
000150026 005__ 20251017144633.0
000150026 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.1177/02633957231165220
000150026 0248_ $$2sideral$$a133739
000150026 037__ $$aART-2023-133739
000150026 041__ $$aeng
000150026 100__ $$0(orcid)0000-0001-9390-4022$$aCasas-Cortés, Maribel$$uUniversidad de Zaragoza
000150026 245__ $$aA corona-carnival? A carnivalesque interpretation of (im)mobilities under COVID-19 lockdowns
000150026 260__ $$c2023
000150026 5203_ $$aThe soviet social theorist Mikhail M. Bakhtin developed the theory of the carnivalesque as a logic of exaggeration, inversion and irony. Beyond carnival events themselves, Bakhtin proposed this logic as a creative instance to foresee openings within an assumed normality. The conceptual gaze of the ‘carnivalesque’ helps to rethink the reconfiguration of actors and practices around mobility, borders and migration during the initial lockdowns of the COVID-19 pandemic. This impasse worked as a corona-carnival in the midst of the current mobility regime. The use of ‘carnivalesque’ in this article is not related to the playful aspects of carnival as a parade, but to the potential of the carnivalesque impasse for envisioning alternatives, which are not necessarily emancipatory but deeply ambivalent, grotesque and unfinished. That carnivalesque momentum, marked by social norms placed on pause, is captured in artistic and linguistic production, acting as a collective legacy for imagining futures otherwise. This paper compiles some keywords which emerged during the corona-carnival impasse, each holding hopeful and dystopian glimpses of possible alterations to the status-quo. These linguistic productions question assumed notions and practices of migration management, opening the social imagination to other ways of engaging with human mobilities.
000150026 540__ $$9info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess$$aAll rights reserved$$uhttp://www.europeana.eu/rights/rr-f/
000150026 590__ $$a2.1$$b2023
000150026 591__ $$aINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS$$b41 / 166 = 0.247$$c2023$$dQ1$$eT1
000150026 591__ $$aPOLITICAL SCIENCE$$b90 / 318 = 0.283$$c2023$$dQ2$$eT1
000150026 592__ $$a0.851$$b2023
000150026 593__ $$aPolitical Science and International Relations$$c2023$$dQ1
000150026 594__ $$a5.5$$b2023
000150026 655_4 $$ainfo:eu-repo/semantics/article$$vinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
000150026 700__ $$0(orcid)0000-0003-0337-8271$$aCobarrubias, Sebastian
000150026 7102_ $$14009$$2775$$aUniversidad de Zaragoza$$bDpto. Psicología y Sociología$$cÁrea Sociología
000150026 773__ $$g44, 2 (2023), 284-301$$pPOLITICS$$tPOLITICS$$x0263-3957
000150026 8564_ $$s197043$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/150026/files/texto_completo.pdf$$yVersión publicada
000150026 8564_ $$s1410722$$uhttps://zaguan.unizar.es/record/150026/files/texto_completo.jpg?subformat=icon$$xicon$$yVersión publicada
000150026 909CO $$ooai:zaguan.unizar.es:150026$$particulos$$pdriver
000150026 951__ $$a2025-10-17-14:27:44
000150026 980__ $$aARTICLE