Everyday Life “Turned upside Down”: Disasters, Future and Resilience
Abstract
Disasters change individuals and the social structure. Two categories are essential to study disasters:  time  and  space.  To  these,  we  should add  risk  that  is  a  cultural  object  resulting  from interpretation. Its representations are subjective and they stem from the socio-cultural framework  of  reference.  In  the  article,  we  will  apply    to  the  COVID-19  epidemic  in  Italy  the  four  risk-related  issues  emerging  by  the  interplay  between  the  degree  of  knowledge  (certain/uncertain) and that of consent (contested/complete) as  in  Douglas  and  Wildavsky.  We will describe the four types of problems about the evaluation of the consequences con-cerning this health risk and we will consider the role of institutions. Since disasters disrupt the  regularity  and  predictability  of  everyday  life,  the  temporal  dimension  individuals  ex-perience is flattened onto the present. Our conclusions reflect on the possibility to counter-act this and on available tools to foresee when constructing a future after a disaster.

