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Anthropologists find Americans’ sense of community wanes as pandemic goes on, leading to increases in public incidents of rage and racism

Anthropologist Lisa Hardy had to step away after the woman on the other end of the phone described how a man, whom she asked to put on a mask in the store where she worked, he unleashed a stream of racist insults, telling her he wished she were dead and that her children should go back to Mexico.

This story, although it is on the extreme end of experiences Hardy has heard in interviews with dozens of Americans in the last nine months, points to changing trends among Americans’ response to the pandemic: that the stories of coming together and sacrificing for the greater good that marked the early days of COVID-19 have given way to stories of frustration, anger, exhaustion and sometimes racism.

Hardy, an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and director of the Social Science  Community Engagement Lab at Northern Arizona University and editor of Practicing Anthropology, and Leah Mundell, a lecturer in the Department of Anthropology engaged in community-based research centered on migration, education and health, have conducted interviews with almost 60 people throughout the country, asking about their experiences and feelings related to the pandemic. 

Experts:

Lisa Hardy, (928) 523-0735 or lisa.hardy@nau.edu

Leah Mundell; (928) 523-1570 or leah.mundell@nau.edu

Talking points

Lisa Hardy quotes

Leah Mundell quotes

Quotes from the interviews