Categories: OpinionTeacher's Desk

‘The stories a nation tells itself matter’: how will the COVID generation remember 2020?

<p><em>This is a longer read&period; Enjoy<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine;<hr &sol;>&NewLine;<p>The speed with which the COVID-19 virus infected the world and the dramatic nature of its fallout is without parallel&period; Individually and collectively we have struggled to understand and process it&period; Early on in the pandemic&comma; journalists looked to historians to help make sense of what was happening and to read from the past the possible impacts of this moment on the future&period; Experts on past pandemics tried to shed light on how we might recover&comma; and on the prospective local and global consequences of this COVID-19 catastrophe&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"align-right zoomable"><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;1000&amp&semi;fit&equals;clip"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;237&amp&semi;fit&equals;clip" sizes&equals;"&lpar;min-width&colon; 1466px&rpar; 754px&comma; &lpar;max-width&colon; 599px&rpar; 100vw&comma; &lpar;min-width&colon; 600px&rpar; 600px&comma; 237px" srcset&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;915&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;1 600w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;30&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;915&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;2 1200w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;15&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;915&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;3 1800w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;1150&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;1 754w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;30&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;1150&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;2 1508w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381623&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-23-z719mw&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;15&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;1150&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;3 2262w" alt&equals;"" &sol;><&sol;a><figcaption><span class&equals;"attribution"><a class&equals;"source" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;griffithreview&period;com&sol;articles&sol;generation-covid&sol;">Griffith Review<&sol;a><&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>Historians find remnants of the past in libraries and archives&comma; in objects&comma; monuments and buildings&comma; in fields and forests&comma; in music and art and images&comma; in memories and stories&period; This is where we find the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;paulkrameronline&period;com&sol;history-in-a-time-of-crisis&sol;">roads not taken<&sol;a>&comma; the possibilities foreclosed&comma; the thinking that shapes a culture&comma; the choices made that&comma; sometimes through the slow accretion of time and action and sometimes suddenly and dramatically&comma; change outcomes and &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;make history”&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The sense that a generation carries a distinct identity is <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;tandfonline&period;com&sol;doi&sol;full&sol;10&period;1080&sol;1031461X&period;2015&period;1120335">forged by sharing<&sol;a> the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;experience of profound and destabilising events”&period; Those events have their greatest impact if people experience them young&comma; typically in their late teens and early 20s&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Generational consciousness is shaped by the sharing of those dramatic events&comma; their subsequent remembering and the recognition&comma; often by older generations&comma; of the distinctiveness of a generational experience or mode of self-representation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>What might the past offer us at this moment&comma; and how will future generations reflect on this year&quest; How will this present become the future’s past&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The COVID generation<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>The generation currently in their late teens and early 20s — the COVID generation — already had cause to be worried about their future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2018 and 2019&comma; hundreds of thousands of them had filled city streets to call for action on climate change and for an end to our dependence on fossil fuels&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 2020&comma; those young people found themselves stuck at home with remote learning&comma; their rites of passage cancelled&comma; their plans upended&comma; their casual labour no longer required&comma; their collective protests in city streets ruled illegal&comma; their sense of agency curtailed by a microscopic virus with its origins in the ecological breakdown they fear&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Many joined the long unemployment queues snaking outside Centrelink offices&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While they are in the age bracket least likely to suffer serious health effects from the coronavirus&comma; they are the generation most likely to struggle to find employment in the post-pandemic world&comma; and the ones who&comma; along with their younger siblings&comma; will be carrying the debt burden of the government’s relief measures for the longest&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The fragility of their future is suddenly even more immediately apparent&period; Not since their great-grandparents were young has an Australian generation lived with such uncertainty&comma; such a profound sense that the future is out of its control&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>Collective memory<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Collective memory” is a term historians use to refer to the ways the public &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;remembers” an event or a period of time&period; It is the version that gets publicly told&comma; endorsed and reworked through films and history books&comma; commemorative activities&comma; monuments and school curricula&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The further back in time an event occurred&comma; the more abstracted the collective memory of it becomes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Think Anzac&comma; now one of our most carefully curated memories&period; In the immediate post-World War I period&comma; understandings of what the war had meant for the nation were <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;publishing&period;monash&period;edu&sol;product&sol;anzac-memories&sol;">highly contested<&sol;a>&period; Defeat at Gallipoli&comma; 60&comma;000 lives lost &lpar;the highest death rate among the Allied forces&rpar;&comma; a divided and grieving home-front community and an economy in shreds were not obvious raw materials from which to build a narrative about heroic manhood and the founding of the nation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Historians played a key role in creating that narrative&period; C&period;E&period;W&period; Bean <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;tandfonline&period;com&sol;doi&sol;abs&sol;10&period;1080&sol;10314618908595824">crafted it carefully<&sol;a>&comma; selecting the stories that would best illustrate the history he wanted to tell&comma; and then campaigning for a monument and museum that would house and celebrate that story — the Australian War Memorial&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Anzac provided a healing narrative that gave solace to grieving families and the nation alike&period; It helped make sense of unimaginable loss&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<figure class&equals;"align-center zoomable"><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;1000&amp&semi;fit&equals;clip"><img src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;fit&equals;clip" sizes&equals;"&lpar;min-width&colon; 1466px&rpar; 754px&comma; &lpar;max-width&colon; 599px&rpar; 100vw&comma; &lpar;min-width&colon; 600px&rpar; 600px&comma; 237px" srcset&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;400&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;1 600w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;30&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;400&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;2 1200w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;15&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;600&amp&semi;h&equals;400&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;3 1800w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;45&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;503&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;1 754w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;30&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;503&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;2 1508w&comma; https&colon;&sol;&sol;images&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;files&sol;381564&sol;original&sol;file-20210201-21-16h1mif&period;jpg&quest;ixlib&equals;rb-1&period;1&period;0&amp&semi;q&equals;15&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;w&equals;754&amp&semi;h&equals;503&amp&semi;fit&equals;crop&amp&semi;dpr&equals;3 2262w" alt&equals;"The Australian War Memorial&period;" &sol;><&sol;a><figcaption><span class&equals;"caption">The Australian War Memorial housed the collective ANZAC narrative&period; It helped make sense of unimaginable loss&period;<&sol;span> <span class&equals;"attribution"><a class&equals;"source" href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;shutterstock&period;com&sol;image-photo&sol;canberra-australia-december-12-2014-australian-239719210">Shutterstock<&sol;a><&sol;span><&sol;figcaption><&sol;figure>&NewLine;<p>For the COVID generation&comma; the return of overwhelming uncertainty cuts deeply in a cohort for whom anxiety and depression were already being described as a pandemic and in a context where mental health was a growing source of national disquiet&period; They might remember that feeling in their future — or it might not be mere memory&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In 50 years’ time&comma; living with anxiety and uncertainty may be a normal part of the human experience&comma; a consequence of the disruption and havoc of environmental degradation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Which stories will the COVID generation remember from 2020 — 20&comma; 30&comma; 50 years from now&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>An X-ray of inequality<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>They might remember their mothers&period; One of the fault lines of the pandemic has been gender&period; More jobs have been lost in <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;smh&period;com&period;au&sol;business&sol;workplace&sol;pandemic-has-impacted-women-most-significantly-20200604-p54ziu&period;html">female-dominated sectors<&sol;a> than in male-dominated ones&period; Gender inequality is being further entrentched&period; While men’s participation in childcare has increased slightly with working-from-home arrangements&comma; women have continued to carry the major load&comma; as well as the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;abc&period;net&period;au&sol;news&sol;2020-06-20&sol;coronavirus-covid19-domestic-work-housework-gender-gap-women-men&sol;12369708">bulk of the housework<&sol;a>&period; The juggle of working while home-schooling their children has taken its toll on women&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The COVID generation might also remember living in families where precarity and uncertainty were daily realities&period; The pandemic has functioned as an X-ray of inequality&comma; revealing the cracks in our social fabric&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Will the image of Melbourne’s public housing towers — in which&comma; as the Victorian premier admitted&comma; some of the state’s most vulnerable communities lived — locked down and encircled by police&comma; or the anxious face of a young child gazing from an upper-floor window&comma; become part of the city’s collective memory&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Let them remember&comma; too&comma; alongside all the failures of our systems that have been exposed by the pandemic&comma; the many examples of community strength and collective endeavour&period; For more than eight months&comma; five million Victorians sacrificed personal freedoms to protect those most vulnerable to the virus&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Many thousands also acted with generosity and selflessness to support and care for those in need&period; Australians around the country made similar sacrifices&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>The stories we tell ourselves matter<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>Historians know the stories a nation tells itself matter&semi; collective memory can suppress competing versions of the past&comma; while individual and family stories might hold conflicting memories&period; Our work has been crucial in shaping and dismantling&comma; telling and retelling the narratives through which we have come to think of ourselves as a nation&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We have colluded in the silences of colonial dispossession&comma; the erasure of women’s voices and the celebration of environmental-wreckage-as-progress&comma; as much as we have&comma; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;in alliances with communities of action”&comma; found voices that have challenged the racist and sexist hierarchies on which such histories were founded&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It’s important to note&comma; however&comma; that many of those stories have not been framed as &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;national”&comma; but rather as histories of specific groups of people&period; Their essence has not been abstracted to a national stage and inflected with the power to carry us forward as Australians in periods of existential crisis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is time to bring these marginalised group stories into the national story so we all learn from them as a nation&colon; understand their morals and enact their lessons&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Such an embrace would provide the opportunity for a more honest reckoning with our past — including Indigenous histories — a more authentic reflection of our collective present and richer traditions from which to draw as we face an uncertain future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The survivors from generations who lived through the Great Depression or World War II&comma; many of them subsequently Australia’s postwar migrants&comma; are among the COVID casualties from our aged-care facilities&period; They are the generation that helped create our contemporary world&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Daily obituaries in The Age told their stories&comma; their experiences of mass unemployment&comma; war&comma; widespread rationing&comma; poverty and few social services&comma; and presented illuminating stories of hardship&comma; endurance and the importance of community&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But beyond the COVID-19 case count&comma; the exposure of an economic system contingent on precarity and inequality&comma; and the incriminating tally of aged-care deaths&comma; what memories might linger and take shape in the generations who live to look back on this watershed year&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h2>An obituary to neoliberalism<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>It is far too early to predict where this particular historical tide will settle and how this moment of crisis will be recalled&period; We are still living this story&comma; still captured by the drama of its unfolding&comma; navigating our way along a shoreline none of us has walked before&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>If 2020 does prove to be a rupture in our previous trajectory&comma; that contingency will entirely depend on what happens next&comma; be that further pandemics and climate catastrophes or a radical rewind of our carbon emissions and a restructuring of our economy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Either way&comma; the memories we take forward from this time will be a mix of stories&period; They will be drawn from individuals and families and gradually coalesce into a broader cultural narrative&comma; one in turn shaped by more powerful forces seeking to draw national significance and meaning from the disaster&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The COVID generation will bring their own distinct memories to shape the national story&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The national stories we tell at this time are crucial&period; We need stories of adaptation and survival&comma; of resilience and sacrifice&comma; of rebuilding lives shattered by world events&comma; of campaigning for justice&comma; of hope and possibilities&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Too many obituaries have already been written as a result of this pandemic&period; But I hope for one more&period; I hope for an obituary to neoliberalism&period; When the COVID generation remember 2020 and the time that came just after&comma; may they remember the power of community action&comma; collective responsibility and the strength of our diverse body politic&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>May they remember the way the passion for change that they carried onto the streets in 2018 and 2019 gradually infected us all&comma; countering the poison of complacency and the power of the fossil-fuel industry alike&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>May they recall a government that&comma; as in the postwar period&comma; invested heavily in employment schemes&comma; in the welfare state&comma; in social housing and higher education&semi; a government willing to make the connections between the droughts&comma; fires and floods that have ravaged our land in the past three years and the pandemic that has ruptured our world&comma; and to act in response — belatedly but definitively — to protect the future&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>And may they celebrate and commemorate a community whose vision&comma; sharpened by these unprecedented times&comma; determined that the history they made and bequeathed would be infused with the values of care&comma; stewardship and justice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<h6><em>This is an edited version of an essay published in <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;griffithreview&period;com&sol;articles&sol;generation-covid&sol;">Griffith Review 71&colon; Remaking the Balance<&sol;a><&sol;em><&excl;-- Below is The Conversation's page counter tag&period; Please DO NOT REMOVE&period; --><img style&equals;"border&colon; none &excl;important&semi; box-shadow&colon; none &excl;important&semi; margin&colon; 0 &excl;important&semi; max-height&colon; 1px &excl;important&semi; max-width&colon; 1px &excl;important&semi; min-height&colon; 1px &excl;important&semi; min-width&colon; 1px &excl;important&semi; opacity&colon; 0 &excl;important&semi; outline&colon; none &excl;important&semi; padding&colon; 0 &excl;important&semi; text-shadow&colon; none &excl;important&semi;" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;counter&period;theconversation&period;com&sol;content&sol;154367&sol;count&period;gif&quest;distributor&equals;republish-lightbox-basic" alt&equals;"The Conversation" width&equals;"1" height&equals;"1" &sol;>&period;<a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;profiles&sol;katie-holmes-1203762">&period; Katie Holmes<&sol;a>&comma; Professor of History&comma; <em><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;institutions&sol;la-trobe-university-842">La Trobe University&period; <&sol;a><&sol;em>This article is republished from <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com">The Conversation<&sol;a> under a Creative Commons license&period; Read the <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;theconversation&period;com&sol;the-stories-a-nation-tells-itself-matter-how-will-the-covid-generation-remember-2020-154367">original article<&sol;a>&period;<&sol;h6>&NewLine;

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