Perplexity as a provocation: revisiting the role of metaphor as a ‘place holder’ for the potential of COVID-19 antibodies
This article revisits long-standing critiques of the role of metaphor in immunological discourse. Drawing on Alfred North Whitehead’s speculative philosophy of organism, I focus on the use of metaphor to explain the process by which COVID-19 vaccine research is able to generate protective antibodies, the challenge of autoimmune disease and dengue fever antibodies. I suggest that metaphors are provoked by the perplexity that arises from presupposing that distinct morphological substances are the first order of reality. I conclude that rather than seeing metaphors as typically skewing conceptions of the body, as has been previously argued, those of memory, recognition and misrecognition may be instructive of a body in transition. Indeed, a process of transition that shows degrees of creativity. When gesturing towards the processual nature of infection and immunity, metaphors invite new modes of shared thinking across the disciplinary divide.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Additional Information |
Funded by Australian Research Council Award Number: DP210101604. |
| Keywords | Covid-19, Metaphors, Immunological discourse, A.N. Whitehead, Perplexity |
| Departments, Centres and Research Units | Sociology > Centre for the Study of Invention and Social Process (CSISP) |
| Date Deposited | 14 Jun 2022 15:28 |
| Last Modified | 14 Mar 2023 11:35 |