Zooming home and family gatherings in pandemic times: ritual, memory, and identity
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Abstract
This study explores the relations between home and family in times of a
pandemic, transporting the family away from the family home and, apparently,
from the family itself. Specifically, it focuses art, culture, and society by
shedding light on the enduring role of family rituals in creating and sustaining
family identity while affirming the role of information and communication
technology (ICT), in both the construction and reproduction of the family
dynamics amid pandemic times. Reflection is taken upon a live-by-Zoom art
exhibition opening. Family photo albums and several artifacts are used to
show the family history, and, at the same time, the installed objects and surrounding
narratives invite others to imagine the artist’s family as well as each
audience member’s own family. The opening took place in March 2021, during
the second lockdown in Portugal. Methodologically, the chapter draws on
data collected through direct observation and autoethnography. Inspired by an
arts-based approach, narrative is built on storytelling sociology, while using
writing as a method of inquiry and reflexive composition to overcome the limits
of the personal narrative. By the end, it is argued that as families “live” at
Zoom, family rituals too. Zoom platform reproduces the family atmosphere,
opportunities, and constraints. Looking at the art exhibit opening as a family ritual allows one to think about how individuals experienced family gatherings
during the pandemic, but also how art might generate such familial intimacies
in such exceptional times.
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Silva, A.R.N., & Costa, Rosalina Pisco (2024). Zooming home and family gatherings in pandemic times: ritual, memory, and identity. In R.P. Costa & S.L. Blair (ed.) More than Just a 'Home': Understanding the Living Spaces of Families, Contemporary Perspectives in Family Research, Volume 25, 115–138. Emerald Group Publishing Limited. ISSN: 1530-3535 | ISBN: 978-1-83797-652-2 | eISBN: 978-1-83797-651-5. doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.1108/S1530-353520240000025006 [SCOPUS Book Series]