Invoking the concept of the "postnormal," Aarthi Sridhar, Annu Jalais, Rapti Siriwardane-de Zoysa, and Sridhar Anantha reflect on how collaborative research can help overcome the pandemic’s limitations. Centering democracy and equity, their Southern Collective developed a range of research projects to collect emerging cultural information about life in the Indian Ocean littoral. As they demonstrate, the building of “networks of solidarity” was central to accomplishing this work and may prove critical to successful research in a postnormal world.
Rapti Siriwardane-de Zoysa
Rapti Siriwardane-de Zoysa is an environmental anthropologist at the Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research, Germany, and co-PI of a DFG-funded project BlueUrban. Her work examines littoral lifeworlds and more-than-human sociality, decolonial island relations, and speculative urban infrastructural futures across the Indo-Malay Archipelago, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and the Dutch Antilles. She is author of Fishing, Mobility and Settlerhood: Coastal Socialities in Postwar Sri Lanka (Springer, 2018), and is coeditor of the forthcoming volumes Coastal Urbanities: Mobilities, Meanings, Manoeuvrings (Brill, 2022) and Rebel Wom!n: Words, Ways, and Wonders (DIO Press, 2022).