Book contents
- Frontmatter
- COntents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The long road ahead
- one BLAME the BAME
- two COVID-1984: wake MBE up when Black Lives Matter
- three Black vaccination reticence: HBCUs, the Flexner Report and COVID-19
- four Pregnancy, pandemic and protest: critical reflections of a Black millennial mother
- five It’s alive! The resurrection of race science in the times of a public health crisis
- six It’s just not cricket: (green) parks and recreation in COVID times
- seven Muslim funerals during the pandemic: socially distanced death, burial and bereavement experienced by British-Bangladeshis in London and Edinburgh
- eight Racial justice and equalities law: progress, pandemic and potential
- nine Out of breath: intersections of inequality in a time of global pandemic
- ten An exploration of the label ‘BAME’ and other existing collective terminologies, and their effect on mental health and identity within a COVID-19 context
- eleven COVID-19 in the UK: a colour-blind response
- twelve Reviewing the impact of OFQUAL’s assessment ‘algorithm’ on racial inequalities
- thirteen The impact of COVID-19 on Somali students’ education in the UK: challenges and recommendations
- Conclusion: Long COVID, long racism
- Index
two - COVID-1984: wake MBE up when Black Lives Matter
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- COntents
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The long road ahead
- one BLAME the BAME
- two COVID-1984: wake MBE up when Black Lives Matter
- three Black vaccination reticence: HBCUs, the Flexner Report and COVID-19
- four Pregnancy, pandemic and protest: critical reflections of a Black millennial mother
- five It’s alive! The resurrection of race science in the times of a public health crisis
- six It’s just not cricket: (green) parks and recreation in COVID times
- seven Muslim funerals during the pandemic: socially distanced death, burial and bereavement experienced by British-Bangladeshis in London and Edinburgh
- eight Racial justice and equalities law: progress, pandemic and potential
- nine Out of breath: intersections of inequality in a time of global pandemic
- ten An exploration of the label ‘BAME’ and other existing collective terminologies, and their effect on mental health and identity within a COVID-19 context
- eleven COVID-19 in the UK: a colour-blind response
- twelve Reviewing the impact of OFQUAL’s assessment ‘algorithm’ on racial inequalities
- thirteen The impact of COVID-19 on Somali students’ education in the UK: challenges and recommendations
- Conclusion: Long COVID, long racism
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Coming from a creative writing background (mainly poetry), I have frequently used my art to discuss political and social problems. Seeing this chapter's title and the subheadings, many of you may think I also have a background in comedy! However, I promise I am not trying to be facetious; but I often use humour to make sense of serious issues. The title ‘COVID-1984’ not only encapsulates the seriousness of many preventable deaths (and ailments brought on by long COVID), but also the significance of intermittent lockdowns adjacent to the Black Lives Matter protests of 2020. Yet, this chapter's main topic is more insidious.
I argue that for some members of the public who were pivotal to the UK's COVID response then to be bestowed with Honours undermines governmental integrity. By ‘Honours’ I refer to the accolades given twice yearly by the Crown on recommendation from the Honours Committee, which is made of both government officials and private citizens (Cabinet Office, 2021). Honours is a carnival of mirrors, and I think it is problematic when people, who position themselves as antioppression, accept them.
For example, the acceptance of knighthoods by Professors Chris Whitty, Gregor Smith and Frank Atherton (Topping, 2021) from a country that, at the same time, has been underfunding the healthcare sector, seem duplicitous. Furthermore, allegations of political corruption have been noted within the Honours system itself (Bright, 2021).
With COVID-19 lockdowns widening inequalities, one must ask if it is appropriate for anybody to be buying into a system in the name of the British Empire – one of the biggest violators of human rights. These symbols of the empire matter, as ‘even symbolic power is power because symbols give out messages to the world’ (Renée Landell qtd in Al-Jazeera, 2022).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- COVID-19 and RacismCounter-Stories of Colliding Pandemics, pp. 14 - 36Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023