COVID time: Temporal imaginaries and pandemic materialities.

IF 2.7 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Ella Butler, Deborah Lupton
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Since the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, several ways of understanding time have emerged: what we may call 'COVID time'. Based on 40 qualitative online interviews in 2022 with Australians living across the continent, this article examines how people situated themselves and COVID-19 in historical time. It further explores how material aspects, place and space (or "pandemic materialities") factored into lived experiences and temporal imaginaries. We focus on how time-related concepts such as synchronisation and the definition of crises and events are interrelated in the participants' understandings of COVID as either over or a continuing crisis. The sociomaterial dimensions that served to alert people to risk and encourage them to engage in preventive action are identified as ways in which COVID time was experienced, remembered, understood and imagined. While some respondents claimed that the present moment was 'post-COVID', for others, the pandemic was far from over in 2022 and indeed stretched into the future. We use a sociomaterial lens to show how respondents portray the 'temporal technologies' and 'objectifications' of the event of COVID-19-the tangible materialisations of its temporal status as either relegated to the past or continuing as a mode of present and future crisis.

COVID 时间:时间想象与大流行病的物质性。
自 COVID-19 大流行以来,出现了几种理解时间的方式:我们可以称之为 "COVID 时间"。本文以 2022 年对生活在澳大利亚大陆各地的澳大利亚人进行的 40 次定性在线访谈为基础,探讨了人们如何在历史时间中定位自己和 COVID-19。文章进一步探讨了物质方面、地点和空间(或 "大流行物质性")如何成为生活经验和时间想象的因素。我们重点关注在参与者对 COVID 的理解中,与时间相关的概念(如同步、危机和事件的定义)是如何相互关联的,这些概念要么是已经结束的危机,要么是仍在继续的危机。社会物质层面的作用是提醒人们注意风险并鼓励他们参与预防行动,这些层面被确定为 COVID 时间的体验、记忆、理解和想象方式。虽然一些受访者声称现在是 "后 COVID",但对其他人来说,2022 年的疫情远未结束,甚至会延续到未来。我们使用社会物质的视角来展示受访者如何描绘 COVID-19 事件的 "时间技术 "和 "物化"--其时间地位的有形物质化,要么归于过去,要么继续作为一种现在和未来的危机模式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.90%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Sociology of Health & Illness is an international journal which publishes sociological articles on all aspects of health, illness, medicine and health care. We welcome empirical and theoretical contributions in this field.
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