This anthropological study explores the beliefs and practices that emerged around masking in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic. Americans responded to this illness as unique subjects navigating the flux of social and corporeal boundaries, supporting certain beliefs and acting to shape them as compelling realities. Debates over health and safety mandates indicated that responses were fractured with varied subjectivities in play—people lived in different worlds and bodies were central in conflicts over breathing, masking and social distancing. Contrasting approaches to practices marked the limits and possibilities of imaginaries, signaling differences and similarities between groups, and how actions could be passageways between people and possibilities. During a time of uncertainty and loss, the "efficacious intimacy" of bodies and materials embedded beliefs, values, and emotions of care in mask sewing and usage. By exploring these practices, the author reflects on how American subjects became relational selves and sustained response-able communities, helping people protect each other from mutating viruses as well as moving forward in a shifting terrain of intimacy and distance, connection, and containment.
Author(s): Urmila Mohan
Series: Routledge Focus on Anthropology
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 138
City: London
Cover
Endorsement Page
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Imaginaries, embodiment, and the U.S. covidscape
Chapter 1 Practices of containment and connection
Chapter 2 Sewing cloth masks and making do with uncertainty
Chapter 3 Performing care and world-making
Chapter 4 Response-ability and transformation of religious subjects
Chapter 5 Conclusion: Imaginaries of masking and unmasking
Index