School of Medicine, Keele University, Keele, UK.
School of Pharmacy and Bioengineering, Keele University, Keele, UK.
Sociol Health Illn. 2024 Sep;46(7):1419-1437. doi: 10.1111/1467-9566.13777. Epub 2024 Apr 15.
This article explores the meanings and uses of a hospital corridor through 98 diary entries produced by the staff of an English specialist hospital during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing on Lefebvre's (1991, The production of space. Blackwell) threefold theorisation of space, corridors are seen as conceived, perceived and lived spaces, produced through and enabling the reconfiguration and reinterpretation of social interactions. The diaries depict two distinct versions of the central hospital corridor: its 'normal' operation prior to the pandemic when it was perceived as a social and symbolic space for collective sensemaking and the 'COVID-19 empty corridor' described as a haunting place that divided hospital staff along ostensibly new social and moral boundaries that impacted negatively on lived work experiences and staff relationships. The mobilisation of the central hospital corridor in the daily social construction of meaning and experience during a period of organisational and societal crisis suggests that corridors should not be only seen as a material backdrop for work relationships but as social entities that come into being and are maintained and reproduced through the (lack of) performance of social relations.
本文通过对一家英语专科医院 COVID-19 大流行早期员工撰写的 98 篇日记,探讨了医院走廊的意义和用途。借鉴 Lefebvre(1991,《空间的生产》,Blackwell)对空间的三重理论化,走廊被视为构想、感知和生活空间,通过并能够重新配置和重新解释社会互动。日记描绘了中央医院走廊的两个截然不同的版本:大流行前的“正常”运作,当时它被视为一个用于集体意义建构的社会和象征性空间,以及被描述为“COVID-19 空荡荡的走廊”的地方,它是一个萦绕不去的地方,沿着表面上新的社会和道德界限将医院工作人员分开,对工作体验和员工关系产生负面影响。在组织和社会危机期间,中央医院走廊在日常社会意义和经验构建中的调动表明,走廊不应仅被视为工作关系的物质背景,而应被视为通过(缺乏)社会关系的表现而产生、维持和再现的社会实体。