Bodies at Work

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INCISBN: 9780761960645

Price:
Sale price$135.00
Stock:
Out of Stock - Available to backorder

By Carol Wolkowitz
Imprint:
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
224

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Carol Wolkowitz is a Reader in the Department of Sociology. Her research has involved a number of different areas of gender studies. She has a long-standing interest in gender in Indian history and politics, stemming from her doctoral research on women politicians' careers in South India. Since then much of her work has focused on gender and employment. She is co-author of two books on homeworking and home-located work, Homeworking Women: Gender, Class and Racism at Work (1995) and Homeworking: Myths and Realities (1987). In 2006 she published Bodies at Work (Sage), exploring 'body work' and the relation between embodiment, gender and the labour process. Her other publications include the Glossary of Feminist Theory (1997), with Terry Lovell and Sonya Andermahr, and several articles exploring the use of personal narratives to understand women's roles in the American communities established by the Manhattan Project during the Second World War. She was also co-editor of Of Marriage and the Market: Women's Subordination in International Perspective (1981 and 1985). Besides supervising PhD theses on a wide range of topics, she teaches a postgraduate module on Sex, Gender and Power and the visual methods component of the MA qualitative methods module. At undergraduate level she convenes Sexuality and Society and co-teaches Visual Sociology

Introduction Embodiment and Paid Employment Picturing Embodied Labour Industrial Bodies Customer Services Vulnerable Bodies Workplace `Accidents', Injury and Ill Health Will Any Body Do? Conceptualizing the `Prostitute Body' Body Work as Social Relationship and as Labour Concluding Remarks

"After reading this book it will be more difficult to 'do' the sociology of work and the sociology of the body in the absence of the other. In some quite exquisite ways it throws down a challenge which practitioners in both fields will find difficult to ignore - Paul Stewart, former editor of Work, Employment and Society, University of the West of England"

You may also like

Recently viewed