“…Across all of these, a concern with the factors shaping varied local experiences and embodiments of disease represents an enduring contribution of geographical research. Just as in global health geography more generally, it will be critical to examine in this way what gets to count as representable "local" experience, in whose "local" bodies, all the while other spaces of exception and biological sub-citizenship go ignored, uncounted or devalued (Brown et al, 2012;Herrick, 2014;Hirsch, 2019;Ingram, 2010;Laurie, 2015;Neely & Nading, 2017;Pallister-Wilkins, 2016;Patchin, 2020;Sparke, 2017a;Taylor, 2019). But to contextualize the coronavirus crisis further, we can also point to (1) geographical work on the emergence of infection, along with research that helps explain the uneven geographies of (2) vulnerability, (3) resilience, (4) blame, (5) immunisation, (6) interdependence and (7) care exposed by the pandemic.…”