4.2 Article

Emotional labour in a translocal context: rural migrant workers in China's service sector

Journal

SOCIAL & CULTURAL GEOGRAPHY
Volume 23, Issue 4, Pages 521-538

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/14649365.2020.1769168

Keywords

China; emotional labour; inequality; migration; reflexivity; service sector; translocality

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This study examines the emotional labor of rural migrant workers in China's urban service sector, as well as the negotiation of power and status between urban employers and rural migrant workers through intersecting emotional and migration regimes. The study introduces the concept of 'translocal emotional reflexivity' to analyze the complex relationship between emotional regimes and subjectivities, and explores the process of 'institutionalized individualization' in the regulation and performance of emotional labor in China over the past decade.
The service industry is a major pillar of China's urban economy. Rural migrant workers form the backbone workforce in China's urban service sector. Despite much attention to the work and life of rural migrants in Chinese cities, urban employers' regulation and rural migrants' performance of emotional labour in the service sector remain understudied. Drawing on participant observation and in-depth interviews over eight years, we examine how urban employer and rural migrant workers relationally navigate intersecting emotional and migration regimes to contest, (re)produce and (re)configure rural migrants' power and status in the urban space. We develop the conceptualization of 'translocal emotional reflexivity' to elucidate multiplicated emotional regimes and subjectivities between places of origin and arrival, as well as how emotional reflexivity is mobilized to regulate, navigate and negotiate conflictual translocal emotional subjectivities. We discuss the 'institutionalized individualization' of emotional labour - a process in which an employer systematically engineers a sense of emotional agency for workers to re-imagine, re-appropriate and individualize their emotional performance to serve institutional aims - as a distinctive feature of how the regulation and performance of emotional labour has evolved over the past decade in China.

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