Abstract
The year 2020 was arguably the most disruptive in modern history.
It has a profound impact on research and pedagogy. There was a dramatic
increase of COVID-19 scholarship within the areas of health science, social
science, and humanities. Slavoj Zizek, a radical philosopher, was one of
the first scholars to write a book on pandemic outside of natural and pure
science (Zizek 2020). The book was published approximately 100 days after
China informed the World Health Organization that the then-unnamed virus
was detected in Wuhan. Other writers like Bill Hayes (2020), Jennifer Haupt
(2020), and Mark Siegel (2020) also contributed on COVID-19 discourse
in the fields of literature and humanities. Many buzzwords like anti-vax,
variants, lockdowns, social distancing, protocols, video conferencing, zoom,
new normal, hybrid education, new form of communism, dystopia, etc. were
generated because of this rich and ever-growing literature.