2020
DOI: 10.1080/00438243.2020.1996770
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Masks in context: representation, emergence, motility and self

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Lupton and collaborators also leverage domestication theory to study how masks became integrated into everyday routines and spaces and to assess the implications for self‐identity and self‐expression. Other scholars emphasize that the COVID facemask cannot be adequately understood as a contingent phenomenon, but must instead be conceptually nested under the broader category of the ‘mask’ in general (Elliott & Conneller, 2020; Inglis, 2020; Leone, 2020). Masks figure prominently in anthropological literature, where they have long been portrayed as marked by ambivalence and social contradiction (Napier, 1986).…”
Section: Toward a Sociology Of Masks During Covid‐19 And Beyondmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lupton and collaborators also leverage domestication theory to study how masks became integrated into everyday routines and spaces and to assess the implications for self‐identity and self‐expression. Other scholars emphasize that the COVID facemask cannot be adequately understood as a contingent phenomenon, but must instead be conceptually nested under the broader category of the ‘mask’ in general (Elliott & Conneller, 2020; Inglis, 2020; Leone, 2020). Masks figure prominently in anthropological literature, where they have long been portrayed as marked by ambivalence and social contradiction (Napier, 1986).…”
Section: Toward a Sociology Of Masks During Covid‐19 And Beyondmentioning
confidence: 99%