The Covid-19 pandemic both popularized and politicized the designation of essential work. Interrogating the dialectics of essential work, this volume of Research in the Sociology of Work presents original research that explores the essentiality of work and highlights the experiences of essential workers during the pandemic, drawing on empirical studies in Canada, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. Demonstrating an enduring struggle for recognition and dignity, as well as for revaluing and materially rewarding essential work, contributors examine the emotional labour involved in gendered care work, the impact of COVID-19 on residential care work, the politics of essentiality and the diversity and intersectional inequality of essential workforces. The final chapters are the first of a new recurring section spotlighting ethnography by presenting both new empirical research and in-depth reviews of extant contributions. Raising pressing questions about the essence of work and its place in contemporary society, Essentiality of Work inspires new debates about the centrality of the work experience and how labour is understood in modern life both for those undertaking work as well as those who benefit.
Raising pressing questions about the essence of work and its place in contemporary society, this volume inspires new debates about the centrality of the work experience in modern life for those working as well as those who benefit from that work.
Chapter
1. Essential Work, Inessential Workers?; Markus Helfen, Rick
Delbridge, Andreas (Andi) Pekarek, and Gretchen Purser
Chapter
2. Doing Essential Dirty Work: Making Visible the Emotion
Management Skills in Gendered Care Work; Anna Milena Galazka and Sarah
Jenkins
Chapter
3. Defining Essential: How Custodial Labor Became Synonymous With
Safety During the COVID-19 Pandemic; Annie J. Murphy
Chapter
4. Fear and Professionalism on the Front Line: Emotion Management of
Residential Care Workers Through the Lens of COVID-19 as a Breaching
Experiment; Valeria Pulignano, Mź-Linh Riemann, Carol Stephenson, and
Markieta Domecka
Chapter
5. The Politics of Essentiality: Praise for Dirty Work During the
COVID-19 Pandemic; Nancy Cōté, Jean-Louis Denis, Steven Therrien, and Flavia
Sofia Ciafre
Chapter
6. Essential Workers in the United States: An Intersectional
Perspective; Caroline Hanley and Enobong Hannah Branch
A Note From the Editors: Introducing the Spotlight on Ethnography
Chapter
7. Floral Ethics and Aesthetics: Understanding Professional Expertise
at Work; Isabelle Zinn
Chapter
8. Ethnographic Studies of Essential Work: Jana Costas Dramas of
Dignity and Peter Birkes Grenzen Aus Glas as Two German Exemplars; Markus
Helfen
Chapter
9. More Than a Slight Ache: On the Ethnographic Sensibility and
Enduring Relevance of Studs Terkels Working; Gretchen Purser
Markus Helfen is Senior Research Fellow in the Hertie School as well as a Private Lecturer at Freie Universität, Germany.
Rick Delbridge is Professor of Organizational Analysis at Cardiff Business School and Co-Convenor of the Centre for Innovation Policy Research, Cardiff University, UK.
Andreas (Andi) Pekarek is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Management and Marketing at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
Gretchen Purser is Associate Professor of Sociology at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University, USA.