000K utf8 1100 2020$c2020-11-17 1500 eng 2050 urn:nbn:de:hbz:464-20201117-102549-4 2051 10.17185/gender/20201117 3000 Schönpflug, Karin 4000 A feminist economics view on racialized, gendered, and classed effects of the COVID-19 crisis [Schönpflug, Karin] 4209 From a European middle class perspective, autumn 2020 is looking more and more apocalyptic. New lockdowns are once again bringing a creaking halt to our 'life-as-we-know-it': Curfews, no leisure shopping, no fitness studio, no holiday flights, no bars and restaurants, no parties, no cultural events. Instead there is again home office and private seclusion, more big disappointments and psychological hardship. Still, it is remarkable how not everyone is affected in the same way, and it is worthwhile to try out an intersectional standpoint (as is practiced in feminist theory and gender studies) to see the cracks that have become visible as the COVID-19 crisis “weakens the foundations of […] interlocking systems of inequality and provides an opportunity for us to imagine feminist alternatives to the prevailing order” (Tobias Neely 2020). 4950 https://doi.org/10.17185/gender/20201117$xR$3Volltext$534 4950 https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:464-20201117-102549-4$xR$3Volltext$534 4961 https://duepublico2.uni-due.de/receive/duepublico_mods_00073409 5051 300 5550 Feminismus 5550 Gesellschaft 5550 Theorie