“Have You Ever Seen Zelensky Without a Haircut?”: Quarantine in Ukraine: The State and the People

Authors

  • Tetiana Tkhorzhevska https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4696-4636
  • Liubov Yakymynska independent resarcher
  • Olga Salamatina associate professor of the Nikolaev national agrarian university

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18357/anthropologica63220211041

Keywords:

ethnography of the state, anthropology of the state, imaginary state, COVID-19, quarantine, Ukraine

Abstract

An anthropological study of the state requires an understanding of everyday practices in human-state interaction. This study, which came about when state-imposed pandemic restrictions required that citizens go into quarantine, draws primarily from auto-ethnography. The conditions under a quarantine brought an end to well-established social practices, presenting a unique opportunity to study them. We explore the ways in which citizens construct the state, looking at citizens working in different institutions and attempting to access various services. This is done by evaluating the quarantine measures implemented by the state in an attempt to understand them.

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Published

2022-01-20

How to Cite

Tkhorzhevska, T., Yakymynska, L., & Salamatina, O. (2022). “Have You Ever Seen Zelensky Without a Haircut?”: Quarantine in Ukraine: The State and the People. Anthropologica, 63(2). https://doi.org/10.18357/anthropologica63220211041