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    STUDIA BIOETHICA - Issue no. Special%20Issue / 2021  
         
  Article:   THE WORLD WILL NEVER BE THE SAME … BUT WILL I CHANGE? ANTICIPATED MORAL CHANGE IN GENERATION X POST-CORONA NARRATIVES.

Authors:  YASHAR SAGHAI, LUCIA GALVAGNI, MONICA CONSOLANDI.
 
       
         
  Abstract:  
DOI: 10.24193/subbbioethica.2021.spiss.103

Published Online: 2021-06-30
Published Print: 2021-06-30
pp. 153


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ABSTRACT: Parallel Session IV, Room 5 In the “Letters from a Post-Corona Future” study, we asked participants to imagine a desirable world after the Corona crisis and their own place within it. In resulting narratives, any imagined that the future will not look like the past, but did they also imagine that their own moral orientation would change, that is, their stance towards what is a good human life, the norms and values deserving respect, and their moral behavior? To explore what we call “anticipated moral change”, we focused on Generation X participants (born between 1965 and 1980) since they may be sufficiently mature to have a settled moral orientation and feel concerned by the future, yet sufficiently adaptable to envision internal change. A total of 64 letters from 11 countries were examined. We used concepts from narrative ethics and futures studies to investigate whether anticipated moral change was present in the letters, and if so, in what direction. We identified six categories of anticipated moral change, from radical moral innovation to daily behavior change. We analyzed how these changes were depicted (e.g., metaphors, modals, idiomatic expressions, narrated futures), felt, justified or evaluated. Results consider the forward-looking moral self-perception of participants in terms of daily behavior, emotions, thoughts, self-advice, norms, values, ideals, images, and dreams, thus contribudting to a better understanding of prospective moral change in times of health crisis. We further conceptualized two important categories of change: the inclusion of personal change into collective moral change and renewed moral awareness.
 
         
     
         
         
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