To read this content please select one of the options below:

The quarantine archives: educators in “social isolation”

Ligia (Licho) López López (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Christopher T. McCaw (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Rhonda Di Biase (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Amy McKernan (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Sophie Rudolph (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Aristidis Galatis (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Nicky Dulfer (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Jessica Gerrard (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Elizabeth McKinley (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Julie McLeod (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)
Fazal Rizvi (Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia)

History of Education Review

ISSN: 0819-8691

Article publication date: 19 September 2020

Issue publication date: 1 December 2020

375

Abstract

Purpose

The archives gathered in this collection engage in the current COVID-19 moment. They do so in order to attempt to understand it, to think and feel with others and to create a collectivity that, beyond the slogan “we are in this together”, seriously contemplates the implications of what it means to be given an opportunity to alter the course of history, to begin to learn to live and educate otherwise.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper is collectively written by twelve academics in March 2020, a few weeks into the first closing down of common spaces in 2020, Victoria, Australia. Writing through and against “social isolation”, the twelve quarantine archives in this paper are all at once questions, methods, data, analysis, implications and limitations of these pandemic times and their afterlives.

Findings

These quarantine archives reveal a profound sense of dislocation, relatability and concern. Several of the findings in this piece succeed at failing to explain in generalising terms these un-new upending times and, in the process, raise more questions and propose un-named methodologies.

Originality/value

If there is anything this paper could claim as original, it would be its present ability to respond to the current times as a historical moment of intensity. At times when “isolation”, “self” and “contained” are the common terms of reference, the “collective”, “connected” and “socially engaged” nature of this paper defies those very terms. Finally, the socially transformative desire archived in each of the pieces is a form of future history-making that resists the straight order with which history is often written and made.

Keywords

Citation

López López, L.(L)., McCaw, C.T., Di Biase, R., McKernan, A., Rudolph, S., Galatis, A., Dulfer, N., Gerrard, J., McKinley, E., McLeod, J. and Rizvi, F. (2020), "The quarantine archives: educators in “social isolation”", History of Education Review, Vol. 49 No. 2, pp. 195-213. https://doi.org/10.1108/HER-05-2020-0028

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles