The Frontlines and Margins: Gendered Care and Covid-19 in the Indian Media

被引:2
|
作者
Raman, Usha [1 ]
Kasturi, Sumana [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hyderabad, Dept Commun, Hyderabad, India
来源
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATION | 2023年 / 11卷 / 01期
关键词
care work; Covid-19; frontline workers; India; media framing; social health activists; women healthcare workers; COMMUNITY-HEALTH WORKERS; NEWS COVERAGE; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; CRISIS;
D O I
10.17645/mac.v11i1.6104
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
Among the many stories that emerged out of India during the pandemic, one was somewhat buried under the media discourse around the migrant crisis, lockdown regulations, and economic fallout. This was the story of striking accredited social health activist workers asking for fair wages, improved benefits, and better working conditions. The Covid-19 crisis highlighted the poor health infrastructure and the precarious, and often, stigmatized nature of frontline work, managed at the community level by paramedical workers, a significant proportion of whom are women. There has been considerable attention paid by feminist groups as well as health-related civil society organizations on the gender-based inequities that have emerged during the pandemic, particularly in relation to care work. This study explores how care work performed by the accredited social health activists was framed in the mainstream media, through an examination of articles in three selected English daily newspapers over one year of the pandemic. Drawing on theoretical work deriving from similar health crises in other regions of the world, we explore how the public health infrastructure depends on the invisible care-giving labor of women in official and unofficial capacities to respond to the situation. The systemic reliance on women's unpaid or ill-paid labor at the grassroots level is belied by the fact that women's concerns and contributions are rarely visible in issues of policy and public administration. Our study found that this invisibility extended to media coverage as well. Our analysis offers a "political economy of caregiving" that reiterates the need for women's work to be recognized at all levels of functioning.
引用
收藏
页码:102 / 113
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The Gendered Consequences of COVID-19 for Internal Migration
    Valerie Mueller
    Camila Páez-Bernal
    Clark Gray
    Karen Grépin
    [J]. Population Research and Policy Review, 2023, 42
  • [32] Gendered pandemics: suicide, femicide and COVID-19
    Standish, Katerina
    Weil, Shalva
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GENDER STUDIES, 2021, 30 (07) : 807 - 818
  • [33] COVID-19: An Indian perspective
    Velayudhan, Bashi
    Idhrees, Mohammed
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY, 2021, 36 (05) : 1713 - 1716
  • [34] COVID-19 and Indian Pediatrics
    Mishra, Devendra
    [J]. INDIAN PEDIATRICS, 2020, 57 (04) : 287 - 287
  • [35] Prioritizing vulnerable populations and women on the frontlines: COVID-19 in humanitarian contexts
    Vandana Sharma
    Jennifer Scott
    Jocelyn Kelly
    Michael J. VanRooyen
    [J]. International Journal for Equity in Health, 19
  • [36] On the Margins: Exploring Minority News Media Representations of Women during the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Beazer, Alice
    Walter, Stefanie
    Eldridge II, Scott A. A.
    Palicki, Sean Kelly
    [J]. DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2023,
  • [37] A student nurse in the MICU: Leveraging unexpected leadership on the frontlines of COVID-19
    Newell, Emily G.
    [J]. NURSING OUTLOOK, 2020, 68 (04) : 388 - 390
  • [38] Protecting Medical Trainees on the COVID-19 Frontlines Saves Us All
    Harrington, Robert A.
    Elkind, Mitchell S. V.
    Benjamin, Ivor J.
    [J]. CIRCULATION, 2020, 141 (18) : E775 - E777
  • [39] On the Frontlines: Protecting Low-Wage Workers During COVID-19
    Cubrich, Marc
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA-THEORY RESEARCH PRACTICE AND POLICY, 2020, 12 : S186 - S187
  • [40] Notes From the Eye of the Storm Trainees at the Frontlines of the COVID-19 Pandemic
    Berookhim, Joshua
    Correa, Ashish
    Tamis-holland, Jacqueline E.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 2020, 76 (02) : 218 - 220