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Plastics in the Pandemic

The Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies 2022 3 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Gauri Pathak

Summary

Researchers examined how the COVID-19 pandemic shifted middle-class attitudes in India toward plastic use, finding that immediate infection risks displaced longer-term concerns about plastic toxicity and drove increased acceptance of single-use plastics. The study reveals how plastics became implicated in logics of ritual purity and secular hygiene during the pandemic, functioning as a perceived barrier against contamination.

Anti-plastic discourses have been gaining momentum in the last two decades, increasingly prompting plastic control policies and plastic avoidant behaviour. The COVID-19 pandemic, however, has brought a profusion of single-use plastics and plastic packaging. What can this change tell us about shifts in subjective experiences of risk in an environment of hypervigilance? The case of India reveals that the pandemic has shifted attention among the middle class from the uncertain, future risks of plastic toxicity toward the more immediate risks brought by COVID-19. It also illuminates how plastics are implicated in the logics of ritual pollution that inform frameworks of secular hygiene. For middle-class consumers, plastics function as a boundary between the outer world of the Other and the inner world of the Self, and the use of plastic packaging becomes a token gesture that provides a sense of protection in the face of a heightened awareness of vulnerability.

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