The Production of Domestic Space and Gender during the COVID-19 Crisis: An Auto-ethnographic Account from a North Indian Small Town

Authors

  • Krishan Takhar Jawaharlal Nehru Univeristy, India
  • Poonam Kumari Independent scholar & teacher, India

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/4hxdbt82

Keywords:

gender, Covid 19, town, home, space

Abstract

The novel coronavirus-induced pandemic has scarcely left any aspect of life untouched. Against the rabid virus, the home was suggested as the site of safety by the governments worldwide. This article by married partners studies the domestic space of their small-town North Indian home, employing an autoethnographic method. The authors ask, How has the COVID crisis shaped their domestic space? With the authority male figure of the susro/father-in-law dwelling at home round the clock during the lockdowns, the domestic space became more gendered. The COVID crisis resulted in reducing the spatial agency of the ‘wife’/daughter-in-law/bhu in the domestic space. However, it was also the time when she strived to make home-outside-home, thus allowing us a revisit to the idea of ‘home’.

Author Biographies

  • Krishan Takhar, Jawaharlal Nehru Univeristy, India

    KRISHAN TAKHAR is a doctoral scholar at the Centre for the Study of Law and Governance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. His major research interests lie in the area of industrial spaces, Governance, Development, Rural-Urban linkages, Informality Studies, Caste and Space/Place Studies. Email: krishantakhar@gmail.com

  • Poonam Kumari, Independent scholar & teacher, India

    POONAM KUMARI is a trained primary school teacher and yoga trainer.

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Published

2025-05-25