In November 2019, a new strain of coronavirus appeared in Wuhan, China,
and quickly spread across the world. Since then, the pandemic has
exposed the brutal limits of care and health under capitalism.
Pandemonium examines how a virus became a crisis along racial, class
and gendered borders, shaped by the legacies of colonialism in which
deaths are passed off as inevitable. It questions the dangers of
capitalist understandings of order and disorder, of health and disease,
and of life itself.
From the origins of the crisis at the crossroads of the
bio-pharmaceutical industry, fossil-fueled pollution, and the
privatization of healthcare in China, Mitropoulos follows the virus
spread as governments embraced reckless strategies of containment. The
failures of quarantines and travel bans racialized the disease, and the
reluctance to expand healthcare capacity deepened already perilous
inequalities. Untested pharmaceuticals and right-wing demands to reopen
the economy no matter the human cost reveal a world where the very
definition of the economy is fundamentally shifting.
Pandemonium demands a radical epidemiology--one that is informed by an
understanding of the interdependence of living things, involving both
the power of combined human agency and the molecular swerve.