journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38496360/hospitality-work-as-social-reproduction-embodied-and-emotional-labour-during-covid-19
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charlotte Jones, Lauren White, Jen Slater, Jill Pluquailec
This article focuses on how the imaginary of a 'safe' environment was visualised and conveyed within the hospitality sector during the COVID-19 pandemic, drawing on diaries and interviews with 21 workers in the UK. Our findings show increased workloads for hospitality staff, compounded by anxieties of risk and individualised COVID-19 regulation work. This includes workers' negotiations of corporeal boundaries and distancing from customers, the visible cleaning of communal areas and recuperation and care work for their own bodies and others in shared living spaces...
April 2024: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38299179/reproduction-and-the-expanding-border-pregnant-migrants-as-a-problem-in-the-2014-immigration-act
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gwyneth Lonergan
This article explores the construction of the UK National Health Service as a 'bordering scape', and the depiction of pregnant migrants as an especial problem, in policy documents and Parliamentary debates around the 2014 Immigration Act. Migrant women's reproductive practices have long been an object of state anxiety, and a target of state intervention. However, this has been largely overlooked in recent scholarship on the proliferation and multiplication of internal bordering processes. This article addresses this gap and contributes to conceptualisations of bordering processes as situated and intersectional, arguing that discourses and anxieties around the reproduction of the nation-state play an important role in informing the construction of the proliferating internal border...
February 2024: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37810547/trading-blame-drawing-boundaries-around-the-righteous-deserving-and-vulnerable-in-times-of-crisis
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jordan Foster, David Pettinicchio, Michelle Maroto, Andy Holmes, Martin Lukk
Symbolic boundaries shape how we see and understand both ourselves and those around us. Amid periods of crisis, these boundaries can appear more salient, sharpening distinctions between 'us' and 'them' and reinforcing inequalities in the social landscape. Based on 50 in-depth interviews about pandemic experiences among Canadians with disabilities and chronic health conditions, we examine how this community distinguishes between the 'deserving' and 'undeserving', and how emotions related to blame and resentment inform the boundaries they draw...
October 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603301/inequalities-in-home-learning-and-schools-remote-teaching-provision-during-the-covid-19-school-closure-in-the-uk
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sait Bayrakdar, Ayse Guveli
Millions were affected by COVID-19 school closures, with parents and schools caught unprepared. Education is expected to play a role in creating equal opportunities, so transferring schooling responsibilities to families may have increased learning inequalities generated by family backgrounds. We examined the time students spent on home learning and explored the role of the schools' distance teaching provision in explaining differences traditionally attributed to parental education, eligibility for free school meals, ethnic background and single parenthood...
August 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37927966/a-bourdieusian-latent-class-analysis-of-cultural-arts-heritage-and-sports-activities-in-the-uk-representative-understanding-society-dataset
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma S Walker, Daisy Fancourt, Feifei Bu, Anne McMunn
To Bourdieu, interaction with culture has symbolic power and drives the manifestation of social stratification. Many have adapted his theory and methodology, developing new models of cultural engagement. Here, to further integrate these theoretical and methodological approaches, Bourdieu's tools were used to operationalise and interpret a Latent Class Analysis of cultural engagement in the Understanding Society dataset. Six classes of increasing engagement were established, and were increasingly correlated with youth, capital and social advantage...
August 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37469592/-no-pass-laws-here-internal-border-controls-and-the-global-hostile-environment
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathryn Medien
This article explores internal border controls in 1980s Britain, examining how they were conceptualised and resisted by a group of activists, the No Pass Laws Here! Group. Drawing on archival research conducted at the Hull History Centre and the Institute of Race Relations and focusing analysis on the Group's public-facing information leaflets and bulletins, this article explores how internal border controls created differentiated access to employment and the welfare state, targeting migrant and racialised residents and citizens...
August 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603248/remembering-and-narrativising-covid-19-an-early-sociological-take
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Manning, Sarah Moore, Jordan Tchilingirian, Kate Woodthorpe
How the COVID-19 pandemic, and the deaths that occurred during the acute phase of the pandemic (2020-2021), will be remembered is yet to be determined. Writing from a UK perspective, this short article reflects on the way in which memory, narratives and death are constructed, contested and (re)produced. Drawing on the authors' respective sociological sub-fields, it makes a case for an ongoing sociological appraisal of emergent COVID-19 narratives, that can encompass and intertwine understandings of temporality, accountability and loss...
June 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37266457/anticipatory-regimes-in-pregnancy-cross-fertilising-reproduction-and-parenting-culture-studies
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Edmée Ballif
Despite attempts at highlighting continuities across the reproductive process from conception to childcare, reproduction and parenting still tend to be studied as a collection of separate objects. This article contributes to the cross-fertilisation of reproductive and parenting culture studies by first introducing anticipation as a transversal analytical lens. A conceptual framework for the analysis of anticipatory regimes in reproduction is introduced with a focus on subjectification effects and future images...
June 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38603333/racial-biofutures-covid-19-and-black-futurity-otherwise
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nadine Ehlers
Through a consideration of COVID-19, this article offers a series of provocations in thinking about racial biofutures. First, it suggests that looking backwards through a lens of recursivity only allows us to see the same anti-black futures mapped out again and again, the repeated production of predictable futures - always - already precarious. Second, along with many others, I argue that we know this story of recursivity and that naming these repetitions is analytically reductive and politically deficient: this is a recursive trap ...
April 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37128258/recalibrating-everyday-futures-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-futures-fissured-on-standby-and-reset-in-mass-observation-responses
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rebecca Coleman, Dawn Lyon
This article contributes to sociologies of futures by arguing that quotidian imaginations, makings and experiences of futures are crucial to social life. We develop Sharma's concept of recalibration to understand ongoing and multiple adjustments of present-future relations, focusing on how these were articulated by Mass Observation writers in the UK during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic. We identify three key modes of recalibration: fissure , where a break between the present and future means the future is difficult to imagine; standby , where the present is expanded but there is an alertness to the future, and; reset , where futures are modestly and radically recalibrated through a post-pandemic imaginary...
April 2023: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35531373/from-me-to-you-time-together-and-subjective-well-being-in-the-uk
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giacomo Vagni
Time together as a family is a crucial dimension of family life. However, its impact on personal happiness is not well understood. I use the United Kingdom Time Use Survey 2014-2015 to study how time spent with partners and children affects daily subjective well-being. Overall, I find that family time, couple time, and time alone with children contributes significantly to mothers' and fathers' well-being. I show that the activities that families share together mediate an important part of the enjoyment of time together but do not entirely explain this association...
April 2022: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34163092/the-temporal-uses-of-moral-things-manifesting-anchoring-and-conserving-caring-relations-within-the-sensorium
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew Balmer, Robert Meckin, Owen Abbott
In this article we argue that menthol-containing products, like chewing gums, vapour rubs and mouthwashes, are used as moral things within everyday practices. They take on moral functions because of how their material qualities contribute to sensory experiences. Specifically, we focus on scenarios in which menthol products become associated with the moral work of care and highlight the temporal dimension of what people do with moral things. We review the literature on morality as a practical, everyday accomplishment and stress the embodied nature of caring practices to outline how care is bound up with sensory experience...
June 2021: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34163091/negotiating-novelty-constructing-the-novel-within-scientific-accounts-of-epigenetics
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martyn Pickersgill
Epigenetics is regarded by many as a compelling domain of biomedicine. The purported novelty of epigenetics has begun to have various societal ramifications, particularly in relation to processes of responsibilisation. Within sociology, it has stimulated hopeful debate about conceptual rapprochements between the biomedical and social sciences. This article is concerned with how novelty is socially produced and negotiated. The article engages directly with scientists' talk and writings about epigenetics (as process and field of study)...
June 2021: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31205374/supported-home-ownership-and-adult-independence-in-milan-the-gilded-cage-of-family-housing-gifts-and-transfers
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lidia Kc Manzo, Oana Druta, Richard Ronald
This article analyses practices of intergenerational support for homeownership among different generations of families in Milan, Italy, highlighting the role of housing in family welfare relations and life-course transitions. It makes use of an original dataset of qualitative interviews investigating homeownership pathways and the negotiations of support that they pre-suppose. The article explores the meanings and moral reasoning behind the decision to accept (or not) support in context of contemporary discourses surrounding the liquidity and availability of housing and finance...
June 2019: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30944499/-now-she-s-just-an-ordinary-baby-the-birth-of-ivf-in-the-british-press
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katharine Dow
The birth of Louise Brown, the first baby born through in vitro fertilisation (IVF), in England in 1978 attracted worldwide media attention. This article examines how the contemporary British news media framed this momentous event. Drawing on the example of the Daily Mail 's coverage, it focuses on the way in which the British press depicted Louise's parents' emotions, marital relationship and social class in a context of political and economic crisis and resurgent social conservatism. The British press framed the Browns as ordinary and respectable, noting their work ethic, family orientation and moral values...
April 2019: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30587878/a-field-theory-perspective-on-journalist-source-relations-a-study-of-new-entrants-and-authorised-knowers-among-scottish-muslims
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael B Munnik
In this article, I apply Bourdieu's field theory to research on the trajectories, strategies and relations of sources and journalists. I argue that the relational emphasis of field theory, modified by the concept of media meta-capital, can be a fruitful way of examining the social context in which representations of Muslims are produced. This advances scholarship that relies too heavily on content analysis to support judgements about news representations of Muslims. I use examples from original fieldwork in Glasgow to discuss the capital, autonomy and heteronomy of Muslim sources who are 'authorised knowers' and 'new entrants' in their source communities...
December 2018: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30587877/-we-call-it-jail-craft-the-erosion-of-the-protective-discourses-drawn-on-by-prison-officers-dealing-with-ageing-and-dying-prisoners-in-the-neoliberal-carceral-system
#17
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marian Peacock, Mary Turner, Sandra Varey
The UK prison population has doubled in the last decade, with the greatest increases among prisoners over the age of 60 years, many of whom are sex offenders imprisoned late in life for 'historical' offences. Occurring in a context of 'austerity' and the wider neoliberal project, an under-researched consequence of this increase has been the rising numbers of 'anticipated' prison deaths; that is, deaths that are foreseeable and that require end of life care. We focus here on 'jail craft'; a nostalgic, multi-layered, narrative or discourse, and set of tacit practices which are drawn on by officers to manage the affective and practical challenges of working with the demands of this changed prison environment...
December 2018: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30319158/of-shepherds-sheep-and-sheepdogs-governing-the-adherent-self-through-complementary-and-competing-pastorates
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Justin Waring, Asam Latif
Foucault's concept of 'pastoral power' describes an important technique for constituting obedient subjects. Derived from his analysis of the Christian pastorate, he saw pastoral power as a prelude to contemporary technologies of governing 'beyond the State', where 'experts' shepherd self-governing subjects. However, the specific practices of modern pastorate have been little developed. This article examines the relational practices of pastoral power associated with the government of medicine use within the English healthcare system...
October 2018: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29899582/creating-undocumented-eu-migrants-through-welfare-a-conceptualization-of-undeserving-and-precarious-citizenship
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jean-Michel Lafleur, Elsa Mescoli
Following the financial and economic crisis, welfare policies across the EU are increasingly becoming instruments for limiting the mobility of certain EU migrants. In this article, we focus on EU citizens who see their freedom of movement in the EU being restricted after they have applied for social assistance or unemployment benefits in their country of residence. Doing so, we conceptualize undocumented EU migration by means of the concepts of 'non-deportability', 'deservingness' and 'precariousness'. Overall, this article - based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted with Italian migrants in Belgium - expands our understanding of undocumented migration by demonstrating how arbitrary and intimidating bureaucratic processes undermine the exercise of EU citizenship...
June 2018: Sociology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29416187/how-to-be-modern-the-social-negotiation-of-good-food-in-contemporary-china
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joy Y Zhang
Developing safe and sustainable food production for its population has been central to China's 'Modernisation Project'. Yet recent fieldwork in three Chinese cities suggests that there are two conflicting views on what a 'modern' agriculture should look like. For the government, modernisation implies a rational calculation of scale and a mirroring of global trends. But an alternative interpretation of modernity, promoted by civil society, has been gaining ground. For this camp, good food production is then established through a 'rhizomic' spread of new practices, which are inspired by world possibilities but are deeply rooted in the local context...
February 2018: Sociology
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