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I, the uncanny: a Heideggerian take on visible difference in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic

I, the uncanny: a Heideggerian take on visible difference in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic
I, the uncanny: a Heideggerian take on visible difference in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic
Heidegger spoke about the Uncanny or 'Unheimlich,' a nouned adjective which can be translated into English as 'unhomely.' But what is a home? For many it is a house, for others perhaps a family or community. Pondering whether the body might be considered our most basic home, I examine what happens when that home itself becomes uncanny, for example through disability. Taking into account my experiences as a gay disabled Romani person, I speak about what it feels like to be seen as uncanny in the eyes of mainstream society and how many people's uncomfortableness with facing up to their own mortality is visible not only through their reactions to people like me, but also to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Heidegger, uncanny, philosophy
2632-5446
48-54
Andekalithan, Chindilani Filifilidh
5aaea41e-be96-4a0c-ae82-6d35b27422dd
Andekalithan, Chindilani Filifilidh
5aaea41e-be96-4a0c-ae82-6d35b27422dd

Andekalithan, Chindilani Filifilidh (2025) I, the uncanny: a Heideggerian take on visible difference in the light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Question Journal, 2025 (9), 48-54. (doi:10.52715/cand001).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Heidegger spoke about the Uncanny or 'Unheimlich,' a nouned adjective which can be translated into English as 'unhomely.' But what is a home? For many it is a house, for others perhaps a family or community. Pondering whether the body might be considered our most basic home, I examine what happens when that home itself becomes uncanny, for example through disability. Taking into account my experiences as a gay disabled Romani person, I speak about what it feels like to be seen as uncanny in the eyes of mainstream society and how many people's uncomfortableness with facing up to their own mortality is visible not only through their reactions to people like me, but also to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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More information

Published date: 1 May 2025
Keywords: Heidegger, uncanny, philosophy

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Local EPrints ID: 503550
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503550
ISSN: 2632-5446
PURE UUID: 5945a1cd-8b19-41cb-8c6f-1381bfc2bf81
ORCID for Chindilani Filifilidh Andekalithan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0009-0007-6719-7126

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Date deposited: 05 Aug 2025 16:37
Last modified: 06 Aug 2025 02:10

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Author: Chindilani Filifilidh Andekalithan ORCID iD

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