This thesis presents the notion that paid elder care work is often more involved with
ordering individuals, than caring for them. It discusses this issue via ethnographic data
about care assistant and nursing auxiliary work, which was collected in two elder care
homes: Hazelford Lodge residential home and Bracken Court nursing home. The thesis
uses care, control, and knowledge as the main themes for the discussion of work in both
homes.
The first chapter sites the thesis within the context of the academic literature on the
discourses of the body, the nature of care work and residential care. It focuses especially
upon care work as body labour. Chapter two presents the ethnographic methodological
approach of the thesis, in two sections. Firstly, the use of the Foucauldian notion of
discourse is explained, and secondly, the research process and research relationships are
explored through a reflexive account.
Chapters two and three present social, structural and spatial aspects of the two settings.
They discuss the different ways in which the homes were organised, and that spaces were
utilised and had different meanings, within the homes. Chapters four and five are based
upon data from Hazelford Lodge residential home, and illustrate the care assistants' work as
centred upon created order in the home, based upon the typification of residents and others.
Chapters six and seven explore the auxiliaries' work in Bracken Court and present three
control issues as central to their jobs. Firstly the overt ordering of patients around spaces in
the home. Secondly, the normalisation of individuals into patient, and objects, of body
work. Thirdly, the auxiliaries' resistance to heir role and status.
Chapter eight compares the work of the assistants and auxiliaries in terms of resident and
patient construction, the nature of the two forms of work, their knowledge, and lastly, their
constructions of place and status. The thesis argues that both groups of workers are
involved in ordering bodies that they perceive to be problematic and degenerating. In
Hazelford Lodge order and discipline is practised as care and in Bracken Court the
auxiliaries use more overt forms of control, but both 'caring' and controlling are effective
methods of creating order. By introducing notions of body labour and ordering, the thesis
presents a unique critique of paid care.
Date of Award | 1994 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Pamela Abbott (Other Supervisor) |
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- Medical Care
- Nursing Home
- Ethnography
- Elderly Care
Discourse, care and control : an ethnography of residential and nursing home elder care work
Lee-Treweek, G. A. (Author). 1994
Student thesis: PhD