Literature DB >> 29464767

Afterword: materialities, care, 'ordinary affects', power and politics.

Joanna Latimer1.   

Abstract

In this paper I explore how the papers in this volume offer ways of thinking about materialities of care in terms of political ecologies, including hierarchies of value as well as assemblages, in which strategic agendas are made present in everyday practices, with profound and ordinary affects, as well as effects. I show how power can work through the association of multiple and heterogeneous materials and social processes to create 'thresholds', as spaces through which people must pass in order to be included as patients, and which circulate specific imaginaries over what counts as an appropriate need. I go on to suggest how some material practices are made mundane and immaterial, that is inconsequential, so that by drawing attention to their importance in how care is done (or not done) the papers help disrupt the commonplace production and reproduction of the 'neglected things' (Puig de la Bellacasa ) of healthcare environments, and by so doing help reimagine what is important for occasions to actually be caring. I then shift to thinking about a sensibility, one that is highly valued in this collection of articles, that helps illuminate different imaginaries of care to those that dominate healthcare environments, an approach that I have called elsewhere 'relational extension', and in the example I offer here show how shifts in extension as a form of motility disrupts stabilities and their reproduction, to accomplish different forms of world-making.
© 2018 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness.

Entities:  

Keywords:  assemblage; immateriality; motility; neglected things; ordinary affects; relational extension

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29464767     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12678

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  7 in total

1.  "Bed Bugs and Beyond": An ethnographic analysis of North America's first women-only supervised drug consumption site.

Authors:  Jade Boyd; Jennifer Lavalley; Sandra Czechaczek; Samara Mayer; Thomas Kerr; Lisa Maher; Ryan McNeil
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2020-04-02

2.  Post-place care: disrupting place-care ontologies.

Authors:  Dara Ivanova
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2020-06-07

3.  Living the everyday of dementia friendliness: Navigating care in public spaces.

Authors:  Katie Brittain; Cathrine Degnen
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2022-02-06

4.  Dispensing care?: The dosette box and the status of low-fi technologies within older people's end-of-life caregiving practices.

Authors:  Tessa Morgan; Robbie Duschinsky; Stephen Barclay
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2022-03-10

5.  How do care environments shape healthcare? A synthesis of qualitative studies among healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Authors:  Mia Harrison; Tim Rhodes; Kari Lancaster
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-09-28       Impact factor: 3.006

6.  Assembling care: How nurses organise care in uncharted territory and in times of pandemic.

Authors:  Syb Kuijper; Martijn Felder; Roland Bal; Iris Wallenburg
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2022-08-05

7.  (In)visible materialities in the context of dementia care.

Authors:  Helena Cleeve; Lena Borell; Lena Rosenberg
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2019-09-27
  7 in total

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