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      The pandemic as gender arrhythmia: Women’s bodies, counter rhythms and critique of everyday life

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          Abstract

          In this paper we build upon recent organizational research drawing upon the work of Henri Lefebvre, and feminist engagements with his theory of “Rhythmanalysis”, to examine how the COVID‐19 pandemic disrupted women's everyday lives and the impacts on their relationship with work. Drawing upon interviews with 38 women from diverse socio‐cultural backgrounds living in Aotearoa New Zealand, we describe the pandemic as an “arrhythmia”, a radical rupture to the familiar rhythms of their everyday social and working lives. We describe how the pandemic arrhythmia was felt in and through bodies (i.e., sleep, weight), and how women responded by creating counter rhythms (i.e., hobbies, exercise, food) as strategies to support their own and others wellbeing. Furthermore, radically disrupting linear repetitions of everyday work, social and family life, the pandemic prompted many to reflect differently upon how pre‐pandemic rhythms shaped by the social, economic and gendered structures of neoliberalism were causing various forms of alienation (i.e., from their own health and wellbeing, meaningful social connections, ethical and sustainable working practices, and from pleasure). For some women, the pandemic arrhythmia was a puncturing of their normalized time‐space gendered routines, leading to critique and transformation to their everyday work‐life patterns. Engaging a feminist reading of rhythmanalysis, this paper brings into focus how neoliberal gender regimes are reconstituted and disrupted in the rhythms and routines of women's everyday lives. In so doing, we highlight the potential in feminist engagement with arrhythmia to extend understandings of the gendered politics of everyday life during and beyond pandemic times, and the value in such approaches for organizational scholars interested in understanding the gendered rhythms of daily life and their effects on relationships with work.

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          One size fits all? What counts as quality practice in (reflexive) thematic analysis?

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            The COVID-19 pandemic has increased the care burden of women and families

            Kate Power (2020)
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              Women's Mental Health in the Time of Covid-19 Pandemic

              Even if the fatality rate has been twice higher for men than for women, the Covid-19 pandemic has affected women more than men, both as frontline workers and at home. The aim of our article was to analyze the differences observed in mental health and violence between men and women in the COVID outbreak. For this purpose, we have used all papers available in PubMed between January and July 2020 as well as data from non-governmental associations. We have thus successively analyzed the situation of pregnancy during the pandemic; the specific psychological and psychiatric risks faced by women both as patients and as workers in the health sector, the increased risk of violence against women at home and at workplace and, finally the risk run by children within their families. In conclusion, research on the subject of mental health issues during the Covid-19 pandemic is still scarce, especially in women. We hope that this pandemic will help to recognize the major role of women at home and at the workplace.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Gender, Work & Organization
                Gender Work & Organization
                Wiley
                0968-6673
                1468-0432
                September 2023
                March 16 2023
                September 2023
                : 30
                : 5
                : 1552-1570
                Affiliations
                [1 ] University of Waikato Hamilton New Zealand
                [2 ] California State University Fullerton Fullerton California USA
                [3 ] Independent Scholar Tamatave Madagascar
                Article
                10.1111/gwao.12987
                344b082b-03a2-4209-9844-5761f01cc190
                © 2023

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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