如果你没有乐趣,你就会死":将长期失业男性的经历解读为巴赫金式的死亡-重生

IF 2.7 3区 管理学 Q1 ECONOMICS
Helen Tracey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从组织结构调整到失业,死亡是个人如何经历和应对变化的一个行之有效的隐喻。然而,死亡隐喻的关键潜力,尤其是与失业和失业有关的隐喻,尚未得到充分认识。本文通过英国泰恩河畔纽卡斯尔一家工作俱乐部中长期失业的男性与他们的个案工作者之间的对话,论述了情景关系求职者反抗理论的缺乏。通过巴赫金的 "死亡-重生 "概念对这些经历进行解读,可以将隐喻性死亡理解为由鄙视性失业言论引发的一种感觉。通过狂欢式的笑声、戏仿和怪诞幽默,重生代表了对这种死亡的暂时抵抗。本文的结论是,这些男性利用死亡与重生之间的狂欢式幽默反转,作为一种关系求职者反抗形式,来抵制对自己失业的指责。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
‘You’d Die if You Didn’t Have Fun’: Interpreting the Experiences of Long-Term Unemployed Men as Bakhtinian Death–Rebirth
Death is a well-established metaphor for how individuals experience and cope with change: from organisational restructuring to job loss. However, the critical potential of death metaphors, particularly relating to job loss and unemployment, has not been fully realised. Drawing on dialogues between long-term unemployed men and their case workers at a Work Club in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK, this article addresses a lack of theorisation of situated relational jobseeker resistance. Interpreting these experiences through Bakhtin’s concept of death–rebirth, metaphorical death can be understood as a feeling induced by stigmatising unemployment discourse. Rebirth represents the temporary resistance of this death through carnivalesque laughter, parody and grotesque humour. It is concluded that the men resist the stigma of blame for their own unemployment by using humorous carnivalesque reversals between death and rebirth as a form of relational jobseeker resistance.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
13.50%
发文量
80
期刊介绍: Work, Employment and Society (WES) is a leading international peer reviewed journal of the British Sociological Association which publishes theoretically informed and original research on the sociology of work. Work, Employment and Society covers all aspects of work, employment and unemployment and their connections with wider social processes and social structures. The journal is sociologically orientated but welcomes contributions from other disciplines which addresses the issues in a way that informs less debated aspects of the journal"s remit, such as unpaid labour and the informal economy.
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