Affiliation:
1. University of the Free State
Abstract
The advent of COVID-19 pandemic saw the declaration of state of national disaster in South Africa which meant that the country was literally shut down with several restrictions on socio-economic and with it some human bodily activities. The situation has brought into the fore a revived interest in the interrogation of the nexus between state power and control of freedom of citizens. As such, the issue has also brought into focus Foucault’s analysis of power in modern and postmodern societies centring on the concept of biopower/biopolitics. Considering the centrality of citizen’s constitutional right to several civil liberties including right to bodily integrity, there is need to explore the limits of state power in the idea of biopolitics. This essay utilises desktop methods to interrogate state’s power and control of citizen’s bodies in South Africa during and post COVID-19 era. Ultimately, the article is an attempt to contribute to the discourse on how political theorising incorporates human embodiment.
Funder
Centre for Gender and Africa Studies, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa
Publisher
Adam Akademi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi
Reference44 articles.
1. Andreescu, M. (2016). ‘The Limits of State Power in a Democratic Society’, Journal of Civil & Legal Sciences, 5(6): 213. doi: 10.4172/2169-0170.1000213.
2. Armstrong, D. (1983). Political Anatomy of the Body Medical Knowledge in Britain in the Twentieth Century. London: Cambridge University Press.
3. Barcelo´, J., Kubinec, R., Cheng, C., Rahn, T.H. and Messerschmidt, L. (2022). Windows of Repression: Using COVID-19 Policies Against Political Dissidents? Journal of Peace Research, 59(1): 73–89.
4. Belyaeva, G.S., Makogon, B.V., Bezugly, S.N., Prokhorova, M.L. and Szpoper, D. (2017). ‘Basic Ideas of State Power Limitation in Political and Legal Doctrine’, Journal of Politics and Law, 10(4): 197-200.
5. Bond, P. (2022). ‘Beyond Sub-Imperial War, ‘Blood Methane’, and Climate-Debt Denialism: South Africa’s Pro-Military Lobby Risks Worsening Multiple Injustices in Northern Mozambique’, The Thinker, 90(2022): 69-80.