Hospital corridors as lived spaces: The reconfiguration of social boundaries during the early stages of the Covid pandemic

Author:

Faux‐Nightingale Alice12ORCID,Kelemen Mihaela3ORCID,Lilley Simon4,Robinson Kerry56,Stewart Caroline27

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine Keele University Keele UK

2. School of Pharmacy and Bioengineering Keele University Keele UK

3. Nottingham University Business School University of Nottingham Nottingham UK

4. Lincoln International Business School University of Lincoln Lincoln UK

5. Liverpool John Moores University Liverpool UK

6. The Performance Practice Ltd. Liverpool UK

7. The Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital NHS Foundation Oswestry Shropshire UK

Abstract

AbstractThis 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.

Publisher

Wiley

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