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
five - It’s alive! The resurrection of race science in the times of a public health crisis
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
Beginnings
The Chinese city of Wuhan, in Hubei province, is 5,474 miles distant from my place of work, Leeds, England. It is the sort of distance that would usually make one feel remote, disconnected and removed from the lives of the 11 million inhabitants in this far-off city. That is probably how many felt in the UK, and other parts of Europe and the West, when news of a new strain of coronavirus (denoted as COVID-19 or SARS-Cov-2) was reported in Wuhan in December 2019. Distant, remote, isolated – words that often make up our language of defence, separation and irrelevance. We use these words as protection against those things that we feel may put us in some sort of jeopardy. How many times do we hear the phrases, ‘I’d keep your distance’, or ‘it's an isolated incident’, or even ‘It's not something remotely relevant?’ They are words that both describe distance and create distance.
With a name like ‘Tan’, you may have already guessed that I have a Chinese heritage. In fact, I can trace my cultural connections through English towns, Welsh valleys, and Chinese shorelines. I am British-born, yet I stand at the confluence of these three cultures. So, when COVID-19 appeared in Wuhan, although physical distance remained, in other, cultural ways, I felt more closely involved (perhaps perilously so). You see Wuhan is only 700 miles from my Chinese, ancestral beginnings in Guangdong province, roughly 100 miles less than the journey between John O’Groats and Land's End in the UK. Passing through the province of Hunan, the fast train from Wuhan to Guangzhou makes a breathtaking journey of only four hours.
Early coverage of the situation in Wuhan by Western media also prompted a cultural resonance within me. There seemed a lot of images of the food markets of the region – busy, bustling places. Without listening to the words of such reports, the images brought back childhood memories of visits to various places where my family then resided, mainly in Malaysia, Singapore and Hong Kong.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- COVID-19 and RacismCounter-Stories of Colliding Pandemics, pp. 70 - 88Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2023