Lydia House
'Stay Home, Stay Safe': Proximity as Vitality and Vulnerability Under Lockdown
House, Lydia; Hopkinson, Leo
Authors
Dr Leo Hopkinson leo.hopkinson@durham.ac.uk
Career Development Fellow - Anthropology of Sport
Abstract
From March to May 2020 in the UK, measures that became known across the world as ‘lockdown’ curtailed personal freedoms in order to curb the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Coronavirus. While initial criticisms of lockdown focused on the adverse impacts of social isolation on wellbeing, this research article explores how lockdown creates new and altered proximities and intimacies as well as distances. During the initial UK lockdown, the ‘household’ and ‘home’ were deployed in public rhetoric as default spaces of care and security in the face of widespread isolation and uncertainty. However, emergent proximities created by bringing people together in the assumed safety of home also deepened existing inequalities and vulnerabilities. Using anthropological theory, third sector evidence, and ethnographic interview data we explore this process. We argue that understanding proximity and intimacy as fundamentally ambivalent, not normatively affirming, is central to recognising how pandemic responses such as lockdown reinforce and reproduce existing forms of inequality and violence.
Citation
House, L., & Hopkinson, L. (2021). 'Stay Home, Stay Safe': Proximity as Vitality and Vulnerability Under Lockdown. Medicine Anthropology Theory, 8(3), 1-29. https://doi.org/10.17157/mat.8.3.5143
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | May 28, 2021 |
Online Publication Date | Sep 28, 2021 |
Publication Date | 2021 |
Deposit Date | Nov 4, 2021 |
Publicly Available Date | Nov 5, 2021 |
Journal | Medicine Anthropology Theory |
Print ISSN | 2405-691X |
Electronic ISSN | 2405-691X |
Publisher | Edinburgh University Library |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 8 |
Issue | 3 |
Pages | 1-29 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.17157/mat.8.3.5143 |
Public URL | https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1224921 |
Files
Published Journal Article
(415 Kb)
PDF
Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Copyright Statement
Copyright (c) 2021 Leo Hopkinson and Lydia House
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
You might also like
Boxing family: Theorising competition with boxers in Accra, Ghana
(2023)
Journal Article
Introduction: What Competition Does
(2022)
Journal Article
Only one Mayweather: a critique of hope from the hopeful
(2022)
Journal Article
Downloadable Citations
About Durham Research Online (DRO)
Administrator e-mail: dro.admin@durham.ac.uk
This application uses the following open-source libraries:
SheetJS Community Edition
Apache License Version 2.0 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/)
PDF.js
Apache License Version 2.0 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/)
Font Awesome
SIL OFL 1.1 (http://scripts.sil.org/OFL)
MIT License (http://opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.html)
CC BY 3.0 ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
Powered by Worktribe © 2025
Advanced Search