The Hidden Labors of Adult Learning: Emotional, Gendered, and the Intersection

Pub Date : 2022-02-25 DOI:10.1177/10451595211051079
Makena Neal, Benjamin D. Espinoza
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Abstract

Arlie Hochschild’s theory of emotional labor (1983) has become a staple framework for understanding the tension that exists between outward emotional expression and inward emotional realities. In it, Hoschild (1983) introduces us to the idea of emotional management, the expectations that are put on us to manipulate the display of our emotions—act—in order to put the experiences of others first. Recently, however, several articles in popular media have used emotional labor to describe labor that deviates from Hochschild’s (1983) original definition. In doing so, popular discourse has highlighted a kind of labor that has historically gone unnamed in the academy. The implications of not naming this other form of labor and instead morphing Hochschild’s original definition yield many consequences if left unchecked. The purpose of this article is to step into the conversation on emotional labor, highlight the gap in language to describe the various types of labor performed by adult learners, and introduce the idea of gendered labor as a way to be better informed in serving adult learners in ongoing development.
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成人学习的隐性劳动:情感、性别和交集
Arlie Hochschild的情绪劳动理论(1983)已经成为理解外在情绪表达和内在情绪现实之间存在的紧张关系的主要框架。在这本书中,Hoschild(1983)向我们介绍了情绪管理的概念,即期望我们操纵自己的情绪表现——行动——以便把他人的体验放在首位。然而,最近大众媒体上的几篇文章用情绪劳动来描述与Hochschild(1983)最初定义不同的劳动。在这样做的过程中,大众话语突出了一种历史上在学术界不为人知的劳动。如果不加以控制,不命名这种另一种形式的劳动,而是改变Hochschild的原始定义,会产生许多后果。本文的目的是进入关于情绪劳动的对话,强调语言上的差距,以描述成人学习者所进行的各种类型的劳动,并介绍性别劳动的概念,作为一种更好地了解成人学习者持续发展的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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