‘It reminds me that I should stop for the little moments’: Exploring emotions in experiences of UK Covid-19 lockdown
‘It reminds me that I should stop for the little moments’: Exploring emotions in experiences of UK Covid-19 lockdown
In this study, we explore how participants articulate experiences of emotions during Covid-19 lockdown in the UK. We posit that emotions fulfil experiential and interpersonal functions, which are construed and conveyed through language choices. An online narrative survey was carried out. About 88 responses were analysed. Participants were from England and Wales. The mean age was 48.9 years old (SD = 62). A mixed-method approach was used. This combined quantitative Corpus Linguistics analysis and qualitative Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis with linguistic analysis. The findings show similarities to the public health and medical literature that highlight negative emotions, such as fear, distrust and anger in participants. However, we also found positive emotions not considered elsewhere, including happiness, relaxation, safety, optimism for the future and connectedness arising from the thematic IPA analysis. Emotions were construed using language explicitly labelling emotions and language implicitly signalling emotions. Our study highlights implications for managing risk behaviours associated with transmission in public health practices such as social distancing, as indicated by negative emotions. We also bring to light implications with perceived benefits of engaging in protective behaviours and social support central to public health measures, as suggested by the communication of positive emotions.
571-588
Bullo, Stella
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Hearn, Jasmine
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Webster, Lexi
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Bullo, Stella
a7de92c4-009a-43b6-ae53-7afa780b82d3
Hearn, Jasmine
cb0fc340-ba41-4e2a-8b8d-ec691d1956ab
Webster, Lexi
73920a7c-4aac-4188-81fb-b604c1dac45c
Bullo, Stella, Hearn, Jasmine and Webster, Lexi
(2021)
‘It reminds me that I should stop for the little moments’: Exploring emotions in experiences of UK Covid-19 lockdown.
Health, 26 (5), .
(doi:10.1177/13634593211046833).
Abstract
In this study, we explore how participants articulate experiences of emotions during Covid-19 lockdown in the UK. We posit that emotions fulfil experiential and interpersonal functions, which are construed and conveyed through language choices. An online narrative survey was carried out. About 88 responses were analysed. Participants were from England and Wales. The mean age was 48.9 years old (SD = 62). A mixed-method approach was used. This combined quantitative Corpus Linguistics analysis and qualitative Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis with linguistic analysis. The findings show similarities to the public health and medical literature that highlight negative emotions, such as fear, distrust and anger in participants. However, we also found positive emotions not considered elsewhere, including happiness, relaxation, safety, optimism for the future and connectedness arising from the thematic IPA analysis. Emotions were construed using language explicitly labelling emotions and language implicitly signalling emotions. Our study highlights implications for managing risk behaviours associated with transmission in public health practices such as social distancing, as indicated by negative emotions. We also bring to light implications with perceived benefits of engaging in protective behaviours and social support central to public health measures, as suggested by the communication of positive emotions.
Text
13634593211046833
- Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 13 September 2021
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 470287
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470287
ISSN: 1363-4593
PURE UUID: 5d87c69e-383f-49f6-8b83-13d2606e222f
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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2022 16:50
Last modified: 20 Aug 2024 02:04
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Author:
Stella Bullo
Author:
Jasmine Hearn
Author:
Lexi Webster
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