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Articles

Making publics in a pandemic: Posthuman relationalities, ‘viral' intimacies and COVID-19

ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon, ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon
Pages 244-259 | Received 24 Jan 2021, Accepted 23 Jul 2021, Published online: 02 Aug 2021
 

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 pandemic has placed sexual relationships into sharp focus as strict containment measures, including physical distancing and ‘stay at home’ restrictions, were initiated to control the spread of the virus. Governments in some jurisdictions prevented contact between non-cohabiting sexual partners (except for couples in pre-existing relationships), while community organisations recommended people avoid casual sexual encounters. This article analyses Australian media articles, commentary and public health messages published during March to October 2020 to explore the normative assumptions underpinning these measures. Applying posthumanist perspectives and Warner’s (2002) conceptualisation of ‘publics’, we consider how COVID-19 public health advice enacts the (human) subject of public health as monogamous, coupled, and living with their partner or nuclear family. Those in non-normative relationships and households are not only excluded from this narrow enactment of the ‘ideal’ public health subject, but are rendered potentially risky disease vectors by virtue of their alternative kinship arrangements. We explore the implications of these findings for the more-than-human relationalities that shape health inequalities and processes of marginalisation during public health crises, and we offer suggestions for public health measures that address the needs of diverse ‘publics’.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 Australia’s stay-home restrictions can be read as inclusive of homonormative forms of kinship that broadly align with heteronuclear models. However, as we go on to show the restrictions exclude relationship and kinship practices that do not conform to this normative model, including casual sexual partnerships, companionate friendships and queer chosen families.

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