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On not being able to read: doomscrolling and anxiety in pandemic times

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-01, 14:11 authored by L Salisbury
This article analyses ‘doomscrolling’, or the compulsive reading of anxiety-inducing online content during the COVID-19 pandemic, against the common idea that it is simply an addictive social practice that impedes mental flourishing. Instead, in order to open up its inclination towards care, I read doomscrolling through the anachronistic neologism that has come to define this specifically textual practice. Tracing the operations that doomscrolling and anxiety perform on lived time, the article uses the work of Eugène Minkowski, Sigmund Freud, Lauren Berlant, Walter Benjamin, and Lisa Baraitser to examine how these practices hope to take care of time when narratives of progressive history have worn thin. I include analyses of the anxious textuality of Don DeLillo’s The Silence and Saidiya Hartman’s reworking of W. E. B. Du Bois’s ‘The Comet’ to demonstrate how doomscrolling emerges from a moment when trust is anxiously fractured, but how it works, nevertheless, to witness what gets to count when time is felt to be coming to an end.

Funding

205400/A/16/Z

Wellcome Trust

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Rights

© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Notes

This is the final version. Available on open access from Routledge via the DOI in this record

Journal

Textual Practice

Pagination

1-32

Publisher

Routledge

Version

  • Version of Record

Language

en

FCD date

2022-03-29T12:20:18Z

FOA date

2022-03-29T12:22:09Z

Citation

Published online 29 March 2022

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  • Archive

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    University of Exeter

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