Mind Maps of the Pandemic
Friday 9th July, 2021
By Georgina Endfield Jacqueline Waldock
The maps draw attention to the couches, the front door and the garden. Annotations include:
Couch now primary residence
My sofa ‘worknest’ the only place in my house I can get decent internet signal!
FRONT DOOR - a portal to somewhere called “outside”
The magic front door where food and deliveries appear each week.
The accentuated focus on the front doors in these maps highlight doorways as key spaces of social contact as well as anxiety, and as a barrier protecting a safe interior from a dangerous, toxic external world. The Green House Map describes an apparent paradox in this respect, with the artist noting their “complete panic at every knock at the door”, whilst also highlighting the door’s significance in providing one of the only points of live social interaction, a place where (socially) distanced conversation with family was possible. This is echoed in the World of a Lockdown Shielder map which highlights the front door as a place for brief and distant social contact as well as concern for staying “3 meters away”.
In these maps, gardens are shown as offering a welcome reprise from the couch, helped by the sunny weather in the first lockdown of Spring 2020. The garden also acts as a barrier, a marker of distance to stay safe. The significance of gardens and outdoor spaces is also noted in other maps. The stark closed edges of the Shielder map reflects a reduction in spatial freedom, a sense of restriction which is borne out by “Baseline data from Jan 3rd-Feb 6th 2020” which reveals ,” a 63% overall reduction in movement” (Drake et al 2020: 385). The maps mark walkways to green spaces, jogging routes and essential shops as spaces external to the home or garden.
Joan’s Lockdown Map 2020
Not all the maps centre on the home. Joan’s map, for example, places her “Yarden” as the core, as “cultivating sanity”. Yarden is Joan’s term for a backyard that has been transformed into a garden. Red brick terrace houses with paved backyards are common in many of Liverpool’s suburbs. Some 16% of homes in Liverpool, 4% higher than the national average, have no access to a private or shared garden. (Liverpool Echo-21-1-21). As key, private and safe spaces, yards, gardens and yardens have taken on particular significance during the lock downs.
Joan’s map also highlights her connection to parks and outdoor spaces and the bird and animal life therein - she has sketched swans, blackbirds and seagulls. This connection with external spaces is echoed in Alice’s and Rosie’s map- the McGiveron map. Their map doesn’t include a garden, but they do note that, “we walk our dog Dixie, [like 1 time a week] we go to a massive field.”
McGiveron Lockdown
Liz also sketched a nearby park in her Liscard map (see below), a map which highlights the challenges in reaching the places beyond her home. Red arrows sweep across her map connecting each of the external spaces back to her home. This is echoed in in Alice’s and Rosie’s map where each activity and space are tied back to their sketch of their home.
Home has long been considered a means of “separating the inside from the outside, nature from human beings, the public from the private sphere” but as these maps demonstrate, the home has been “materially and spatially imbricated with nature, non-humans and the ‘outside’” (Kaika, 2004: Power; 2009) during lock down.
Liscard Map
The idea of home and the home place, argues Creswell (2004, p. 24), “is an exemplary kind of place where people feel a sense of attachment” but clearly never more so than during the global pandemic. The sweeping green lines on Joan’s map and the red arrows of the Liscard map echoes this attachment visual connecting every external space back to the home space. All the maps show the home and its immediate environs as core features demonstrating perhaps how the COVID crisis has served to re-focus attention on the place of the home at once as a place of safety, isolation, separation and dislocation, confinement, fear and confusion. For more about the Mapping Home strand of the project see https://www.stayhomestories.co.uk/mapping-home.
References cited:
Byrne, M. (2020) “Stayhome: Reflections on the meaning of home and the COVID-19 pandemic,” Irish Journal of Sociology 2020
Cresswell, T. (2004) Place. A short Introduction. Blackwell Publishing
Drake, T.M. (2021) “The effects of physical distancing on population mobility during the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK,” Lancet Digital Health, Aug; 2(8):385-387
Bailey J. “Mapping as a Performative Process.” pp188-204 Duxbury, N. Garrett-Petts, W.F. and Longley, A. (2019) Artistic Approaches to Cultural Mapping.
Kaika, M (2004) Interrogating the Geographies of the Familiar: Domesticating Nature and Constructing the Autonomy of the Modern Home,” International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 28, no. (2): 265–86
Power, E. R. (2009). Domestic temporalities: Nature times in the house-as-home, Geoforum, 40(6), 1024-1032.