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The COVID Clay Diary

Tait, AD

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Abstract

Wednesday 10.38am

I’m afraid...

Well, maybe not afraid, but disconcerted, unsettled, a little
perturbed. The ground beneath my feet feels unstable, a bit like one of those fairground attractions I remember from my childhood
with the sliding floors and wonky mirrors.

Yesterday the university I work for cancelled most of the face-to-face teaching due to the COVID-19 global pandemic. I walked out of the building with as much of my desk as I could fit in my rucksack; a laptop, some vital paperwork, a print I’d swapped with a
colleague and as much of the library as I could carry. I abandoned
my favourite mug, watered the plants and left, wondering if we’d
be back in September complete with a cohort of shiny new undergraduates or if the whole place would be opened up in fifty years like a giant time capsule.

So now as I write, the financial markets are in freefall and social
media is divided between predictions of the apocalypse, people
wanting virtual validation of their integrity for checking on elderly
neighbours and, satirical (dark, but amusing) memes. Fake news
abounds and the capacity for human lunacy is astonishing. I’m
trying to take the wide view with as much logical pragmatism as
I can muster, applying a degree of criticality to everything I read.
That said, I did panic buy three packets of biscuits yesterday in the
supermarket, but who doesn’t need a Jammie Wagon Wheel in a
time of crisis?

On the train on my way home I hatched a plan; I feel the need to
document events as they unfold.
What if I keep a diary? Not the traditional written kind, but one
made of objects – a cup(?) - every day for as long as necessary. The global context is larger than I can deal with. We could lose people we love; some already have. Jobs, businesses, livelihoods will inevitably be damaged and the effects of this level of disruption
might rumble on for years. But what about the minutiae? How will
we remember that? The actual lived experience of a global event
plotted as it unravels. If nothing else it will give me something to
focus on during what promises to be a challenging time.

I’m starting today. My new year’s resolutions have historically
lasted on average three to four days, so I’m sceptical about my own
ability to maintain momentum. Nevertheless, here goes…

Citation

Tait, A. (2021). The COVID Clay Diary. Salford, UK: University of Salford

Book Type Authored Book
Publication Date Jan 1, 2021
Deposit Date Aug 25, 2022
Publicly Available Date Aug 25, 2022
ISBN 9781912337446

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