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UNDER THE RAINBOW by James Attlee

UNDER THE RAINBOW

Voices From Lockdown

by James Attlee ; photographed by James Attlee

Pub Date: Sept. 7th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-913505-06-6
Publisher: And Other Stories

A collection of British citizens discussing the pandemic.

A few months after lockdown began, Attlee noticed a rainbow image displayed in many people’s windows. Curious, he knocked on doors to ask what it meant and, after a while, widened the scope of his conversations to talk about people’s experiences with the virus, their views about the government’s response, and their sense of the future. Those conversations inform this thoughtful meditation on the effects of the pandemic on individuals’ lives and livelihoods. Rainbows, depicted in the author’s color photographs, had various meanings: for some, a gesture of support for health workers; for others, a symbol of hope. One woman told him that “people who experience a miscarriage often describe the first baby they have after a miscarriage as a rainbow baby—it’s what you get after the storm.” A gay artist was disturbed because rainbows, representing pride for queer communities, “had been ‘recoded.’ ” Others resented that the rainbow became appropriated into corporate branding and by self-serving politicians who boasted rainbow badges. With its meaning mutating, the rainbow, Attlee decided, was behaving “more like a virus than a flag.” Among those Attlee talked with were a cafe owner, a pub owner, and food service workers, who revealed devastating challenges; angry protestors against masks and restrictions; and a nurse who spoke about the complications of caring for Covid-19 patients when there was a severe shortage of critical care nurses. Many criticized the government’s ineptitude: A decade of austerity, one man told Attlee, left Britain’s health system “ill-equipped to deal with something like a pandemic.” As in the U.S., the pandemic coincided with revelations of systemic racism, inequalities in access to health care, and increasing evidence of climate change. “Both the virus and shocking evidence of police brutality have reminded us that in the end we are indivisible from the physical world,” Attlee writes; “we are bodies that need to breathe.”

A sensitive journey into our changed world.