棘手肮脏工作中的交叉性:孟买拾荒者如何赋予其工作和生活意义

Intersectionality in Intractable Dirty Work: How Mumbai Ragpickers Make Meaning of Their Work and Lives

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2021
被引 64
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

研究孟买拾荒者如何在种姓、贫困和肮脏工作的多重污名交叉中,同时构建无助感与积极意义(生存、命运、希望),实现功能性矛盾心理以维持生活。

Abstract

Recent dirty work research has begun to explore intersectionality, attending to how meaning is made at the intersection of multiple sources of taint. This research has shown that individuals often construct both positive and negative meanings, which can be challenging to manage because the meanings people construct require a certain coherence to provide a foundation for action. This challenge is intensified when dirty work is intractable—when it is difficult, if not impossible, for a person to avoid doing this work. Our study of meaning making in the face of intractable dirty work examines ragpickers in Mumbai, India, who handle and dispose of garbage, and are further tainted by belonging to the lowest caste in Indian society, and living in slums. These ragpickers constructed both an overarching sense of helplessness rooted in the intractability of their situation, and a set of positive meanings—survival, destiny, and hope—rooted in specific facets of their lives and enacted through distinct temporal frames. By holding and combining these disparate meanings, they achieved “functional ambivalence”—the simultaneous experience of opposing orientations toward their work and lives that facilitated both acceptance and a sense of agency, and enabled them to carry on in their lives.

社会学劳动研究性别研究社会心理学印度研究