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You are here: Home › Epidemiology & Public Health › Chronique d’un film catastrophe bien preparé – Libération
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Chronique d’un film catastrophe bien preparé – Libération

October 21, 2014 | Filed under: Epidemiology & Public Health, French, Guinea, Investigative journalism, Liberia, Politics & Economy, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Society & Culture and tagged with: ajustement structurel, Guillaume Lachenal, preparedness

Guillaume Lachenal a publié sur le site internet de Libération, en date du 18 septembre 2014, une très intéressante tribune traitant de l’épidémie actuelle du virus Ebola.

«Inutile d’interpréter laborieusement les films catastrophe dans leur rapport à une crise sociale “objective” ou même à un phantasme “objectif” de catastrophe», écrivait Jean Baudrillard en 1981. C’est dans l’autre sens qu’il faut dire que c’est «le social lui-même quis’organise selon un scénario de film de catastrophe». Il y a peu, Libération consacrait quelques colonnes à l’analyse de films d’apocalypse, miroirs de nos anxiétés face aux pandémies. L’épidémie de virus Ebola, qui ravage plusieurs pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest, exige une critique plus radicale. La crise actuelle n’est pas un cauchemar qui se réalise sous nos yeux, «comme dans les films catastrophe». Elle n’est pas une anomalie, ni un accident qui aurait pris de court les organisations sanitaires ; elle n’est pas, pour reprendre la langue de bois diplomatique, un «défi» organisationnel, financier et politique lancé à la communauté internationale et aux humanitaires. C’est dans l’autre sens qu’il faut le dire : la crise Ebola est le produit de deux décennies de choix et d’actions politiques.

Article complet : http://www.liberation.fr/monde/2014/09/18/chronique-d-un-film-catastrophe-bien-prepare_1103419

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← The significance of death, funerals and the after-life in Ebola-hit Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia: Anthropological insights into infection and social resistance
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