During the COVID-19 pandemic, access to space has been strictly regulated and restricted. Many of us feel acutely disconnected from our relationships, while at the same time new forms of (virtual) intimacies have become ubiquitous. In the pandemic present, nearly all interpersonal relations are now characterised by a double absence that is concrete and material, and also emotional and felt. This article offers a theoretical reflection on how conditions of absence create new practices of intimacy and new strategies of coping. It does so by discussing how pre-pandemic emotional repertoires are translated into new forms of intimacy that can synchronise or throw out of sync. It highlights the centrality of spatial and temporal relations under a...
The COVID-19 pandemic has reconfigured every social, political, economic and cultural aspect of mode...
Abstract This article is about adaptations to the regimentation of public and private living through...
In this commentary, we reflect on the limitations, somber difficulties, and possibilities of new geo...
This article is a rumination on the ramifications of COVID-19 on practices of intimacy. In first exp...
While much of the sociological scholarship on intimacy has been understood in the normative sense of...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
The outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 has threatened ethnographic inquiry, undermining its quintessential chara...
From March to May 2020 in the UK, measures that became known across the world as ‘lockdown’ curtaile...
The editorial discusses the impacts of the global pandemic to human agency, through the authors self...
Pandemics not only challenge health systems and the economy, they also deeply transform our everyday...
This paper revisits a performance titled Falling in Love Again - and Again which was first performed...
Though comparisons between HIV and SARS-CoV-2 are of limited use, many people experience the epidemi...
COVID-19 and UK-wide lockdown measures in spring 2020 confined people to their homes, with implicati...
During the COVID-19 emergency, people around the world are debating concepts like physical distancin...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The COVID-19 pandemic has reconfigured every social, political, economic and cultural aspect of mode...
Abstract This article is about adaptations to the regimentation of public and private living through...
In this commentary, we reflect on the limitations, somber difficulties, and possibilities of new geo...
This article is a rumination on the ramifications of COVID-19 on practices of intimacy. In first exp...
While much of the sociological scholarship on intimacy has been understood in the normative sense of...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
The outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 has threatened ethnographic inquiry, undermining its quintessential chara...
From March to May 2020 in the UK, measures that became known across the world as ‘lockdown’ curtaile...
The editorial discusses the impacts of the global pandemic to human agency, through the authors self...
Pandemics not only challenge health systems and the economy, they also deeply transform our everyday...
This paper revisits a performance titled Falling in Love Again - and Again which was first performed...
Though comparisons between HIV and SARS-CoV-2 are of limited use, many people experience the epidemi...
COVID-19 and UK-wide lockdown measures in spring 2020 confined people to their homes, with implicati...
During the COVID-19 emergency, people around the world are debating concepts like physical distancin...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
The COVID-19 pandemic has reconfigured every social, political, economic and cultural aspect of mode...
Abstract This article is about adaptations to the regimentation of public and private living through...
In this commentary, we reflect on the limitations, somber difficulties, and possibilities of new geo...