当六英尺感觉像六英里

S. K. Nenga
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)全球大流行期间,儿童如何描述他们的日常生活?他们的描述揭示了大流行如何影响他们以及他们的需求是什么?由于一些儿童可能难以用语言表达他们的经历,该项目采用参与式绘画和照片语音方法,征求儿童对大流行期间生活的看法。本章以解释性复制为基础,特别关注儿童如何借用和操纵2019冠状病毒病全球大流行的视觉元素,在绘画和照片中表达自己的关切和价值观。德克萨斯州的21名6至16岁的儿童制作了图像,说明了缓解病毒努力的社会情感后果。他们的照片记录了大流行如何破坏了他们的规范和制度,增加了他们的焦虑和孤独,并促使他们探索新的活动和与朋友联系的方式。儿童创造性地挪用和改变了大流行的视觉元素,以表明病毒缓解战略正在阻止他们与他们非常重视的朋友和家人进行面对面的互动。©2022选择和编辑事项,Nazneen Khan;个别章节,贡献者
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When Six Feet Feels Like Six Miles
How do children describe their everyday lives during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) global pandemic? What do their descriptions reveal about how the pandemic has affected them and what their needs are? Because some children may have difficulty verbalizing their experiences, this project used participatory drawing and photovoice methods to elicit children’s perspectives on their lives during the pandemic. Drawing on interpretive reproduction, the chapter pays particular attention to the ways that kids borrow and manipulate visual elements of the COVID-19 global pandemic to express their own concerns and values in drawings and photographs. Twenty-one children in Texas, aged 6 to 16 years, crafted images that illustrated the socio-emotional consequences of virus mitigation efforts. Their images documented how the pandemic disrupted their norms and institutions, increased their anxiety and loneliness, and pushed them to explore new activities and ways of connecting with friends. Children creatively appropriated and altered visual elements of the pandemic to suggest that virus mitigation strategies were preventing them from engaging in the face-to-face interaction with the friends and family that they valued so highly. © 2022 selection and editorial matter, Nazneen Khan;individual chapters, the contributors
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