“…Perceiving cleaning and wearing a mask as emasculating, pacifying practices, as men did (see also Glick 2020), they conceived the negation to disinfect and wear a mask as "resistance" to the hegemonic model of hygiene COVID-19 rules as described by scientists and the government. By doing this, they confirmed "resistance" as a dominant, gendered, motif of organizing action in Greek society especially in periods of "crisis" (for a discussion of different forms of resistance during the Greek financial and refugees' crises see Kalantzis 2016;Theodossopoulos 2014;Topali, 2020). However, most women ritually controlled the incorporation of "strangers" (objects, bodies) into the house making them stop, disinfect/get masked and then become acceptable.…”