Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Time shifts: Place, belonging, and future orientation in pandemic everyday life.
Collier, Patrick; Connolly, James J.
  • Collier P; Ball State University, USA.
  • Connolly JJ; Ball State University, USA.
Hist Human Sci ; 36(2): 105-127, 2023 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2293590
ABSTRACT
The disruptions to everyday life wrought by the COVID-19 pandemic include distortions in the experience of time, as reported widely by ordinary citizens and observed by journalists and social scientists. But how does this temporal disruption play out in different time scales-in the individual day as opposed to the medium- and long-term futures? And how might place influence how individuals experience and understand the pandemic's temporal transformations? This essay examines a range of temporal disruptions reported in day diaries and surveys submitted to the Everyday Life in Middletown project, an online archive that has been documenting ordinary life in Muncie, Indiana, USA since 2016. Viewing these materials as instances of life writing, the essay probes the interactions between temporal disruptions and the local setting as they inflect the autobiographical selves our writers construct in their pandemic writings. It shows how living in Muncie-a postindustrial city with its particular combination of historical, demographic, economic, social, and political dynamics-structures the autobiographical stories available to our writers, and how the disruption of time produces new variations and problems for life writing. In the midst of a global crisis, we glimpse the pandemic's reshaping of a local structure of feeling in which a pervasive, local narrative of civic decline frames individual self-fashioning.
Keywords

Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Observational study Language: English Journal: Hist Human Sci Year: 2023 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: 09526951221139377

Similar

MEDLINE

...
LILACS

LIS


Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Type of study: Observational study Language: English Journal: Hist Human Sci Year: 2023 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: 09526951221139377