{"title":"“关怀与控制”展览对流行病的反思:拒绝、合同和公众","authors":"Maud Perrier, Alice Tatton Brown, Junko Yamashita","doi":"10.1177/14647001231191665","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article presents reflections on our pre-Covid-19 exhibition Care and Control, and our interdisciplinary collaboration between artist Alice Tatton Brown and social scientists Maud Perrier and Junko Yamashita. The reflections expand current feminist debates about self-care and collective care by centring the importance of public space, refusals and contracts. Care and Control was designed as both an exhibition and a meeting place, created through our ongoing collaboration. It took place in a shopping centre in Bristol (UK) in June 2019. The exhibition was a collage of feminist archival objects and print, contemporary installation and community engagement. Care and Control began broadly as an experiment to seek out alternatives to an individualist approach to self-care, by researching how Women's Liberation Activists practised self-care and collective care beyond the household, and within protest, friendship and public space. In this article, we make a methodological contribution to feminist discussions of collective care by showing how our strategy of a) making a public exhibition and b) writing a Contract of Care is a significant technique for enacting some of the promise of Audre Lorde’s ‘self-care as warfare’. We show how Care and Control, drawing from the legacy of the Women's Liberation Movement, generated resources for countering definitions of self-care that predominate. Reflecting on how the Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated classed, racialised and gendered divisions in reproductive labour, our article suggests that self-care and collective care need to be conceptualised drawing on social reproduction.","PeriodicalId":47281,"journal":{"name":"Feminist Theory","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Pandemic reflections on the Care and Control exhibition: refusals, contracts and publics\",\"authors\":\"Maud Perrier, Alice Tatton Brown, Junko Yamashita\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/14647001231191665\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This article presents reflections on our pre-Covid-19 exhibition Care and Control, and our interdisciplinary collaboration between artist Alice Tatton Brown and social scientists Maud Perrier and Junko Yamashita. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这篇文章介绍了我们对新冠肺炎前展览“护理与控制”的反思,以及艺术家Alice Tatton Brown与社会科学家Maud Perrier和Junko Yamashita之间的跨学科合作。这些反思通过集中公共空间、拒绝和合同的重要性,扩大了当前关于自我护理和集体护理的女权主义辩论。Care and Control被设计成一个展览和会议场所,通过我们持续的合作创建。它于2019年6月在布里斯托尔(英国)的一家购物中心举行。展览是女权主义档案物品和印刷品、当代装置和社区参与的拼贴画。护理与控制最初是一项实验,旨在通过研究妇女解放活动家如何在家庭之外、抗议、友谊和公共空间内进行自我护理和集体护理,寻找个人主义自我护理方法的替代方案。在这篇文章中,我们通过展示我们的a)举办公共展览和b)撰写护理合同的策略是如何实现Audre Lorde“将自我护理视为战争”的一些承诺的重要技巧,为女权主义对集体护理的讨论做出了方法论贡献。我们展示了“关爱与控制”如何借鉴妇女解放运动的遗产,为对抗占主导地位的自我保健定义创造资源。考虑到新冠肺炎大流行如何加剧了生殖劳动中的分类、种族化和性别化分歧,我们的文章建议,自我护理和集体护理需要在社会再生产的基础上进行概念化。
Pandemic reflections on the Care and Control exhibition: refusals, contracts and publics
This article presents reflections on our pre-Covid-19 exhibition Care and Control, and our interdisciplinary collaboration between artist Alice Tatton Brown and social scientists Maud Perrier and Junko Yamashita. The reflections expand current feminist debates about self-care and collective care by centring the importance of public space, refusals and contracts. Care and Control was designed as both an exhibition and a meeting place, created through our ongoing collaboration. It took place in a shopping centre in Bristol (UK) in June 2019. The exhibition was a collage of feminist archival objects and print, contemporary installation and community engagement. Care and Control began broadly as an experiment to seek out alternatives to an individualist approach to self-care, by researching how Women's Liberation Activists practised self-care and collective care beyond the household, and within protest, friendship and public space. In this article, we make a methodological contribution to feminist discussions of collective care by showing how our strategy of a) making a public exhibition and b) writing a Contract of Care is a significant technique for enacting some of the promise of Audre Lorde’s ‘self-care as warfare’. We show how Care and Control, drawing from the legacy of the Women's Liberation Movement, generated resources for countering definitions of self-care that predominate. Reflecting on how the Covid-19 pandemic has exacerbated classed, racialised and gendered divisions in reproductive labour, our article suggests that self-care and collective care need to be conceptualised drawing on social reproduction.
期刊介绍:
Feminist Theory is an international interdisciplinary journal that provides a forum for critical analysis and constructive debate within feminism. Theoretical Pluralism / Feminist Diversity Feminist Theory is genuinely interdisciplinary and reflects the diversity of feminism, incorporating perspectives from across the broad spectrum of the humanities and social sciences and the full range of feminist political and theoretical stances.