ABSTRACT

This book explores what anthropology can contribute to an understanding of how people live through pandemics. It reflects on how pandemics are experienced and what we can learn from Covid-19 as well as previous instances that might inform future responses and help to alleviate suffering. The chapters highlight current research and longer-term reflections from different countries and areas of the discipline, covering medical anthropology, care and surveillance, digital and experimental ethnography, and the everyday economies of lockdown. They show the breadth and originality of anthropological work relevant to thinking about and responding to pandemic situations. Extending beyond Covid-19, the volume considers the implications for ongoing and future research under pandemic restrictions and gives a broad overview of current anthropology relevant to questions about pandemics. It will be of interest to both academic and applied anthropologists, as well as to sociologists and those working in global and public health.

chapter 1|19 pages

How to live through a pandemic

Introduction to the volume

chapter 4|28 pages

Modelling the new “social”

The evolution of risk assessments and mathematical modelling during the “first wave” of the pandemic

chapter 5|22 pages

Digitalizing everyday life in Denmark during the corona crisis

The construction of an ethnographic archive

chapter 6|20 pages

A difference of sameness

Home as a site of research in a study of Covid inequalities in Scotland

chapter 7|24 pages

Lockdown and livelihoods in rural South India

Rethinking patronage and care at the time of Covid-19

chapter 8|22 pages

Care and surveillance

The good citizens of Covid-19

chapter 9|27 pages

Facing uncertainty

The social life of face coverings and defensive biopolitics during a pandemic

chapter 10|8 pages

Afterword

Pandemic, hope and anthropological praxis