Self‐care rhetoric and institutional culpability: Theorizing the academy and intellectual labor

IF 3.2 1区 社会学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Emily R. Cabaniss, Shannon N. Davis, Kylie L. Parrotta
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Abstract

Self‐care, a ubiquitous concept commonly touted as the solution to an array of modern‐day problems, implies unapologetic selfishness aimed at preserving mental, emotional, and physical health. The overtly individualistic framing in its most common usage—the centering of oneself for the sake of oneself—obscures power relations and structural/institutional inequalities that create the need for self‐care. To deal with difficult work or family lives, taking up a hobby or some kind of diversion offers an escape that feels good; self‐care serves as a kind of coping mechanism, but not a solution to a social problem. It also lets society, or more specifically, managers and administrators in organizations, off the hook because it places the onus on individuals to deal with challenges on their own rather than situating them as social problems. We critique shortcomings in self‐care rhetoric employed by organizations—and specifically university administrators—to their members, by extending Hochschild's economy of gratitude framework.
自我保健修辞与机构责任:学院与智力劳动的理论化
自我保健是一个无处不在的概念,通常被吹捧为解决一系列现代问题的方法,它意味着毫无保留的自私,旨在维护心理、情感和身体健康。在最常见的用法中,这种明显的个人主义框架--为了自己而以自己为中心--掩盖了造成自我保健需求的权力关系和结构性/制度性不平等。为了应对艰难的工作或家庭生活,培养兴趣爱好或进行某种消遣可以提供一种感觉良好的逃避;自我保健是一种应对机制,但不是解决社会问题的办法。它还让社会,或者更具体地说,让组织中的管理者和行政人员摆脱困境,因为它把个人应对挑战的责任放在了他们自己身上,而不是把它们归结为社会问题。我们通过扩展霍赫希尔德的 "感恩经济 "框架,批判了组织--特别是大学管理者--对其成员使用的自我保健修辞中的不足之处。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
42
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