Source avec lien : PLoS One, 17(11). 10.1371/journal.pone.0277676
S’appuyant sur les expériences des membres de l’expédition du programme antarctique australien de 2019 à 21, cet article va à l’encontre de la perspective des médias populaires en explorant la façon dont les protocoles COVID-19 – y compris la quarantaine et la distanciation sociale – ont affecté le bien-être individuel des membres de l’expédition et leurs expériences de l’environnement social.
With Antarctic expeditioners popularly portrayed in the media during the pandemic as both heroic stalwarts better equipped than any other people to deal with the rigours of isolation and, paradoxically, the only people untouched by the virus, it was all too easy to ignore the actual experiences of those working in the continent. Drawing on the experiences of expeditioners in the Australian Antarctic Program from 2019–21, this article provides a counter to popular media perspective by exploring how COVID-19 protocols–including quarantine and social distancing–affected expeditioners’ individual well-being and their experiences of the social environment. We argue that Antarctic life during COVID-19 has not been as detached from the rest of the world nor as heroic as the popular media has suggested, but nonetheless provides important insights for survival in isolated, confined, and extreme environments (ICE) and non-ICE environments at a time of pandemic.