Article (Scientific journals)
“COVIDwear” and Health Care Workers. How Has the New Materiality of Clothing Affected Care Practices?
MAJERUS, Benoît; GANSCHOW, Inna
2022In European Journal for Nursing History and Ethics, (4)
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
enhe_2022_majerus_interviews ganschow.pdf
Publisher postprint (268.31 kB)
Download

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
covid; mask; material
Abstract :
[en] The pandemic fundamentally changed the material culture of clothing for care workers. If most of them wore already some sort of uniform, be it for hygienic reasons, be it to make their status visible, Covid19 profoundly transformed the clothing codes, beyond the mask. These new “protections” thoroughly changed the caring experiences in several aspects. As they enclose the body more intimately, working conditions became more laborious. The sensory land¬scapes of care (vision, hearing, touch, taste, smell) were fundamentally altered. Working rhythms had to be adopted as putting on the garments took longer. If care clothing had been characterised by a slow de-standardisation since the 1970s, the pandemic made a uniformed and medicalised uniform again mandatory.
Disciplines :
Arts & humanities: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Author, co-author :
MAJERUS, Benoît ;  University of Luxembourg > Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH) > Contemporary European History
Other collaborator :
GANSCHOW, Inna  ;  University of Luxembourg > Luxembourg Centre for Contemporary and Digital History (C2DH) > Contemporary History of Luxembourg
External co-authors :
no
Language :
English
Title :
“COVIDwear” and Health Care Workers. How Has the New Materiality of Clothing Affected Care Practices?
Publication date :
2022
Journal title :
European Journal for Nursing History and Ethics
Issue :
4
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
FnR Project :
FNR14704989 - History In The Making: #Covidmemory, 2020 (01/06/2020-31/03/2021) - Stefan Krebs
Available on ORBilu :
since 06 July 2023

Statistics


Number of views
52 (3 by Unilu)
Number of downloads
14 (0 by Unilu)

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBilu