ダウンロード数: 16

このアイテムのファイル:
ファイル 記述 サイズフォーマット 
seas_13_1_7.pdf667.47 kBAdobe PDF見る/開く
タイトル: Vietnamese Carescapes in the Making: Looking at Covid-19 Care Responses in Berlin through the Affective Lens of Face Masks
著者: Müller, Max
von Poser, Anita
Willamowski, Edda
Tạ, Thị Minh Tâm
Hahn, Eric
キーワード: Covid-19 pandemic
Vietnamese diaspora
face mask controversy
anti-Asian racism
community care
carescape
発行日: Apr-2024
出版者: Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
誌名: Southeast Asian Studies
巻: 13
号: 1
開始ページ: 7
終了ページ: 33
抄録: Face masks were undoubtedly one of the most visible and (at least in some countries of the Global North) most controversial markers of the Covid-19 pandemic. Contrary to the white-German majority society in Berlin, Vietnamese migrants in the city were aware of the essential role of wearing masks in public right from the beginning of this health crisis. In March 2020, when the German government agency for disease control was still advising the general public against donning masks, former Vietnamese contract workers were already producing thousands of fabric masks for donation to ill-prepared hospitals and care facilities. Vietnamese students in Berlin, as well as children of Vietnamese migrants born and/or raised in Germany, also initiated various mask-related campaigns to tackle the health crisis and supportlocal Vietnamese communities. Based on digital ethnography in the spring of 2020, as well as later offline ethnographic exploration, we tracked the emergence of Vietnamese care networks trying to cope with the then-evolving pandemic. Looking through the analytical lens of face masks, we aim to highlight people’s emic understandings of care as materialized in self-sewn masks. Besides showing the processual character of those care responses, we also aim to work out distinct differences between the migrant generation and post-migration actors regarding their motivations for organizing their respective campaigns. While our interlocutors from the latter group were much more vocal about anti-Asian racism and thus focused on community care projects, the Vietnamese migrants we talked to framed their care response in terms of a narrative of giving back to their second home country at a time of need. In addition, we will show how these care responses were differently shaped by media discourses from Vietnam and/or the global Vietnamese diaspora.
著作権等: ©Copyright 2024 Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2433/287863
DOI(出版社版): 10.20495/seas.13.1_7
出現コレクション:Vol.13 No.1

アイテムの詳細レコードを表示する

Export to RefWorks


出力フォーマット 


このリポジトリに保管されているアイテムはすべて著作権により保護されています。