Comparative Insights on Masking (or not) in Coping with Covid-19: Customary Tuareg Covering in Niger, Controversial Covering in the United States, and Their Broader Implications for Theories of Danger, Pollution, and Contagion Cover Image

Comparative Insights on Masking (or not) in Coping with Covid-19: Customary Tuareg Covering in Niger, Controversial Covering in the United States, and Their Broader Implications for Theories of Danger, Pollution, and Contagion
Comparative Insights on Masking (or not) in Coping with Covid-19: Customary Tuareg Covering in Niger, Controversial Covering in the United States, and Their Broader Implications for Theories of Danger, Pollution, and Contagion

Author(s): Susan Rasmussen
Subject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Politics, History, Anthropology, Social Sciences, Recent History (1900 till today)
Published by: Univerzita Karlova v Praze - Fakulta humanitních studií
Keywords: COVID-19; Tuareg; Africa; United States; pollution; symbolism; politics

Summary/Abstract: This article explores attitudes and practices regarding covering in comparative perspective, focusing on the mask and masking and their promo tion in two very different cultural settings that onetheless also share some broad similarities: Niger, with particular emphasis on the Tuareg case and the mediating roles of smith/artisans in dissemination of cultural knowledge and health education, and the United States, with particular emphasis on politicians as mediators and Texas in these processes. There is analysis of the cultural-symbolic and socio-political re-workings of meanings and uses of masking in relation to these settings’ prevalent, widely-held mores concern ing facial covering and their wider significance for understanding theories of danger, pollution, and contagion in anthropology

  • Issue Year: 25/2023
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 139-170
  • Page Count: 32
  • Language: English