Journal
SOCIOLOGICAL FORUM
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 265-286Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1573-7861.2011.01240.x
Keywords
aging; care work; dignity; emotions; ethnography; health; nursing homes
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This article examines how nursing home care workers use emotions to construct dignity at work. Previous scholarship has shown how the financial and organizational characteristics of nursing homes shape and constrain emotion work among staff. Using evidence gathered during 18 months of participant observation in two nursing homes and 65 interviews with staff, this article analyzes how, despite obstacles, nursing home care workers generated authentic emotional attachments to residents. Surprisingly, some staff members said they particularly appreciated working with residents difficult to control. They felt accomplished when such residents successfully transitioned from life at home to life in institutional care. Emotions created dignity for staff and induced compliance among residents. Emotions are not only generated by organizations and imposed on workers; staff themselves produced emotions-sometimes in ways consistent with organizational demands, and sometimes not-and they consistently found in their emotions a resource to manage the strains of their work lives.
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