Love in the time of COVID-19: How couples stayed 'at home' during the first lockdown in Italy

被引:3
作者
Manzo, Lidia Katia Consiglia [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Milan, Dipartimento Sci Sociali & Polit SPS, Via Conservatorio 7, Milan, Italy
关键词
COVID-19; lockdown; emotion-risk assemblage; couple relationships; love; home; temporalities; STRESS;
D O I
10.1080/14649365.2022.2130417
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学]; K9 [地理];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
How did the initial COVID-19 lockdown affect family life in terms of household chores, childcare, finances, communication, sexuality and other spheres of a romantic relationship? How do these issues differ based on whether the couple is in a long-distance relationship, dating but not living together, or is married or cohabitating, with or without children? Drawing on a virtual ethnography of Italian social-media communities, sixteen follow-up online interviews with eight adult couples and a discussion of their 'Corona diaries', this contribution extends a practice-based approach to focus on couples' experiences, feelings and coping strategies during the COVID-19 lockdown temporalities of Spring 2020 in Italy. Forced self-isolation eroded feelings of ontological safety, making especially non-cohabiting partners feel even more vulnerable to the stress of contagion risk and loneliness. This phenomenon in some cases even de-romanticized the relationship to avoid feeling the lack of the partner. On the contrary, cohabiting couples revealed a discomfort linked to 'domestic gravity' and daily crowding, or the difficulty of safeguarding small moments of solitude. Conflicts were particularly exacerbated when partners had to reconcile agile work, childcare and domestic work. Working mothers with young children are among those most affected by the increased workload and resulting frustration.
引用
收藏
页码:428 / 446
页数:19
相关论文
共 57 条
[11]  
Butler J., 1990, PERFORMING FEMINISMS, V519, P531
[12]   The early phase of the COVID-19 epidemic in Lombardy, Italy [J].
Cereda, Danilo ;
Manica, Mattia ;
Tirani, Marcello ;
Rovida, Francesca ;
Demicheli, Vittorio ;
Ajelli, Marco ;
Poletti, Piero ;
Trentini, Filippo ;
Guzzetta, Giorgio ;
Marziano, Valentina ;
Piccarreta, Raffaella ;
Barone, Antonio ;
Magoni, Michele ;
Deandrea, Silvia ;
Diurno, Giulio ;
Lombardo, Massimo ;
Faccini, Marino ;
Pan, Angelo ;
Bruno, Raffaele ;
Pariani, Elena ;
Grasselli, Giacomo ;
Piatti, Alessandra ;
Gramegna, Maria ;
Baldanti, Fausto ;
Melegaro, Alessia ;
Merler, Stefano .
EPIDEMICS, 2021, 37
[13]  
Cirulli F., 2020, COVID 19 COPING STRE
[14]   The affective turn - Political economy, biomedia and bodies [J].
Clough, Patricia T. .
THEORY CULTURE & SOCIETY, 2008, 25 (01) :1-+
[15]   Human Rights-inspired Governmentality: COVID-19 through a Human Dignity Perspective [J].
Colombo, Enzo .
CRITICAL SOCIOLOGY, 2021, 47 (4-5) :571-581
[16]  
Davidson Joyce., 2007, Emotional Geographies
[17]  
Duncan J.S., 2004, A companion to cultural geography, P382, DOI [DOI 10.1002/9780470996515.CH25, DOI 10.1002/9780470996515]
[18]  
Dunn K., 2021, Qualitative Research Methods in Human Geography, VFifth, P148
[19]  
Dyck I., 1999, Antipode, V31, P372
[20]  
Easthope Hazel., 2004, Housing, Theory and Society, V21, P128, DOI [10.1080/14036090410021360, DOI 10.1080/14036090410021360]