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Self-Care as Social Crafting: Transnational Narratives During COVID-19.

Gillian Chan
Published in: Medical anthropology (2023)
Contrary to public health framings of self-care as individualized bodily regulation, people's transnational COVID-19 narratives revealed self-care to be a means of crafting social relatedness. In their self-care practices, interviewees drew on their richly structured field of relations, exercised dexterity and discernment in attending to them, and forged new webs of relatedness. Moreover, some recounted moments of radical care when they disregarded bodily boundaries in co-isolating with and caring for infected friends or relatives. These narratives of caring with rather than in isolation from one's social entanglements provide an alternative imaginary through which we can consider future pandemic responses.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • coronavirus disease
  • public health
  • sars cov
  • mental health
  • single cell
  • global health
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus