菲律宾关怀,社会接近和社会距离

IF 0.2 Q4 WOMENS STUDIES
Alden Sajor Marte-Wood
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2020年3月25日。现在是凌晨四点。自从成为父亲后,我就有意地开始越来越早地醒来。我尽量保持安静,以免打扰我的配偶Martine和我们蹒跚学步的孩子,他们都在隔壁房间睡觉。随着为人父母的新要求,我不得不创造这样的时刻。安静的清晨时刻,完成学业。在日常育儿之前的一段时间。但今天早上不同了。由于新冠肺炎大流行,休斯顿刚刚发布了居家令。非必要的工人要呆在家里。我是一个非必要的工作者,一个助理教授。我教的是人文学科,这些学科已经对它们的持续存在感到不安全。我坐在我们一居室公寓客厅的破旧沙发上,客厅是一个分开的空间。半居住区。沙发,电视,矮桌子。中场休息区。我们蹒跚学步的孩子的玩具乱七八糟地散落在地毯上。和许多其他人一样,我很难想象在可预见的未来我将如何在家工作。面授课程突然被取消了,我不知道在这个狭小的空间里我将在哪里举办我的第一次在线研讨会。我计划教牙买加·金凯德的中篇小说《露西》(1990),这是一部深刻的半自传叙事,揭示了美国移民看护人复杂的性别化、种族化和跨国动态。这是一个关于护理极限的故事。我认为在厨房里教书是最有意义的
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Filipinx Care, Social Proximity, and Social Distance
March 25, 2020. It’s four in the morning. Since becoming a father, I’ve intentionally begun to wake up earlier and earlier. I’m trying to be as quiet as possible so as not to disturb my spouse, Martine, and our toddler, both asleep in the next room. With the new demands of parenthood, I’ve had to carve out moments like this. Quiet, early morning moments to get academic work done. A sliver of time before the routines of childcare. But this morning is different. Houston has just issued a stay-at-home order because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Nonessential workers are to stay at home. I’m a nonessential worker, an assistant professor. I teach in the humanities, a constellation of disciplines already insecure about their continued existence. I’m seated on the worn couch in our one-bedroom apartment’s living room, a split space. Half living area. Sofa, television, low table. Half play area. Our toddler’s toys scattered about the carpet in chaotic disarray. Like so many other people, I have a difficult time imagining how I’m going to work from home for the foreseeable future. In-person classes have been abruptly canceled, and I don’t knowwhere I’mgoing to host my first online seminar meeting in this cramped space. I’m scheduled to teach Jamaica Kincaid’s novella, Lucy (1990), a profound, semiautobiographical narrative that reveals the complicated gendered, racialized, and transnational dynamics of migrant caregivers in the United States. It’s a story about the limits of care. I think it makes the most sense to teach from our kitchen
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CiteScore
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