Butler uses the COVID pandemic to ask questions about how we relate to each & how these relations create disparity & inequality. At the same time she questions ideas about individuality & nationalism that came to the forefront as the world tried to deal with larger epidemiological issues. There is an opportunity for change, recognizing how we are all connected to each other and to the earth. The most fascinating issue she raises is the relationship between grievability (who can be grieved in a tiered society) and inequality.
"The pandemic upends our usual sense of the bounded self, casting us as relations, interactive, and refuting the egological and self-interested bases of ethics itself." 22
"...Heidegger claimed that "the world picture" is not a picture of the world but, rather, the world conceived and grasped as a picture. He raised questions about whether the world could or should be conceived that way and what it meant that pictures were coming to stand for the world." 16
"Under pandemic conditions, the very elements upon which we depend for life carry the potential to take life: we come to worry about touching someone, and breathing their air, unexpected proximity..."26
"When personal liberty permits the destruction of others and the earth, then personal liberty claims destruction as it derogative. I am certainly not against personal liberty, but the destructive form seems to me to be less about the person or the individual than about a nationalist sense of belonging and even a market sense of profit and gain that rationalizes the destruction of the earth and its climate. There is another form of freedom that is sidelined by this one, and it emerges amid social life, a life that seeks a common world, a life that is free to seek a common world. " 33
"The restrictions stop me from acting in certain ways, but they also lay out a vision of the interconnected world that I am asked to accept. If they were to speak, they would ask me to understand that this life that I live as bound up with other lives and to regard this "being bound up with one another" as a fundamental feature of who I am." 39
"The ethical quandary, or vector, that the pandemic produces begins with the insight that my life and the lives of others depend on a recognition of how our lives depend in part upon how each of us acts. So my action holds your life, and your action holds mine, at least potentially." 40
"Individuality is an imagined status and depends on specifically social forms of the imaginary." 41
"But the problem of radical inequality haunts every phase of pandemic time: whose lives are considered valuable as lives and whose are not?" 61
"...Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, formulated an ethical precept that took "the world" to be its measure, suggesting that such a concept may be central to ethical reflection going forward. "None of us can accept a world in which some people are protected while others are not." He was calling for an end to nationalism and to the market rationality that would calculate which lives are more worth safeguarding and saving than others by indexing borders and profits." 63
"The pandemic has illuminated and intensified racial and economic inequalities at the same time that it heightens the global sense of what our obligations are to one another and the earth." 65
"The intersubjective dimension of our lives...have to understood as an "interlacing," an "overlapping," or perhaps through the rhetorical figure of the chiasm. The chiasm is that shared domain occupied by two distinct entities that, in every other respect, are quite clearly separate from each other. What the body is, then, is to some extent its relations to other bodies, and that relationally is to be thought as an ontological status that cannot be rightly understood through considering the body as substance; rather, relationally establishes and undoes the individual subject in the same stroke." 75
"Merleau-Ponty's metaphors are pervasively erotic and harmonious. Even the "interlacing" does not seem like a bad deal. In my view, Merleau-Ponty underestimates the rage that can emerge from unstable forms of differentiation..." 78
"I have argued that it is not possible to understand social inequality without understanding how grieveability is inequality distributed. That unequal distribution is a key component of social inequality, one that generally has not been taken into account by social theorists. It follows that the designation, whether explicit or implicit, of a group or population as ungreiveable means that they can be targeted for violence or left to die without consequence." 93
"I would simply add that once we recognize the unequal distribution of the grievability of lives, our debates about equality and violence will be transformed, and the link between the two domains, more firmly understood." 107
"Vladimir Putin would surely agree that destruction is the ultimate sign of personal power, if not liberty. The rage is the voice of personal liberty as it abandons a common or shared life, the ideals of collective freedom, and the care for the earth and for living creatures, including human ones." 108