Abstract
These proceedings represent selected papers from the conference Pandemic Perspectives: Reflections on a Post-Covid World, held on 20th April 2021. It was hosted by the Pandemic Perspectives group, an interdisciplinary network of scholars interested in Covid-19’s continued significance, and its manifold long-term consequences.
The publication showcases the long-standing interest of the Pandemic Perspectives network in engaging in dialogue across cultural and disciplinary borders, with papers on topics widely ranging as the future of the office, women’s health, and classical reception.
The diversity and scope of the papers in this collection detail the far-reaching impact the Covid-19 pandemic has had on the lives of people of all countries, classes, and occupations. Their publication together in this volume, it is hoped, will encourage a multiplicity of responses in our readers, from those who had direct experience of the topics and policies recounted in these articles, who lived through the lockdowns, travel bans and manifold other restrictions on day-to-day life, and those who will write the history of the Coronavirus pandemic in the years to come. For both audiences, this publication stands as testament to the initial responses of a range of early career researchers, whose contrasting geographical, disciplinary, and intellectual traditions nevertheless cohered in some unexpected and enlightening ways during the exceptional circumstances of the pandemic.
The publication showcases the long-standing interest of the Pandemic Perspectives network in engaging in dialogue across cultural and disciplinary borders, with papers on topics widely ranging as the future of the office, women’s health, and classical reception.
The diversity and scope of the papers in this collection detail the far-reaching impact the Covid-19 pandemic has had on the lives of people of all countries, classes, and occupations. Their publication together in this volume, it is hoped, will encourage a multiplicity of responses in our readers, from those who had direct experience of the topics and policies recounted in these articles, who lived through the lockdowns, travel bans and manifold other restrictions on day-to-day life, and those who will write the history of the Coronavirus pandemic in the years to come. For both audiences, this publication stands as testament to the initial responses of a range of early career researchers, whose contrasting geographical, disciplinary, and intellectual traditions nevertheless cohered in some unexpected and enlightening ways during the exceptional circumstances of the pandemic.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 80 |
Journal | Ubiquity Proceedings |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 20 Dec 2022 |