Working Bodies
Interactive Service Employment and Workplace Identities
Studies in Urban and Social Change

1. Auflage Oktober 2009
284 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Through a series of case studies of low-status interactive and
embodied servicing work, Working Bodies examines the
theoretical and empirical nature of the shift to embodied work in
service-dominated economies.
* Defines 'body work' to include the work by service
sector employees on their own bodies and on the bodies of
others
* Sets UK case studies in the context of global patterns of
economic change
* Explores the consequences of growing polarization in the
service sector
* Draws on geography, sociology, anthropology, labour market
studies, and feminist scholarship
Series Editors' Preface vii
Preface and Acknowledgements viii
1 Service Employment and the Commoditization of the Body 1
Part I Locating Service Work 23
2 The Rise of the Service Economy 25
3 Thinking Through Embodiment: Explaining Interactive Service
Employment 49
Part II High-Touch Servicing Work in Private and Public
Spaces 77
4 Up Close and Personal: Intimate Work in the Home 79
5 Selling Bodies I: Sex Work 101
6 Selling Bodies II: Masculine Strength and Licensed Violence
129
Part III High-Touch Servicing Work in Specialist Spaces
159
7 Bodies in Sickness and in Health: Care Work and Beauty Work
161
8 Warm Bodies: Doing Deference in Routine Interactive Work
191
9 Conclusions: Bodies in Place 212
References 229
Index 256
"Between the covers of this beautifully crafted book is a thoughtful, innovative, and thorough analysis of high-touch interactive service work that draws on numerous case studies and ethnographies, mostly from the United Kingdom, and on the author's own original research. . . . This ambitious book is insightful and informative, and it makes a valuable contribution to the study of work in contemporary capitalist societies". (Canadian Journal of Sociology, 2010)
There are many books on service employment, but very few like this one. In this beautifully written and thoughtful book Linda McDowell shows, in turn, how such employment should not be seen as a new phenomenon, brings the cares, emotions and exploitations that go into servicing the bodies of others (children, consumers, elders, families, buyers of sexual services) close into view, and outlines a complex range of attributes - from skills and capabilities to personal and bodily features - that now count as essential employment requirements. The humdrum comes alive in the hands of this skilled ethnographer of work."
--Ash Amin, Durham University
Linda McDowell's state-of-the-art discussion demonstrates not only the importance of embodiment for current understandings of work but also the centrality of the workplace for the study of embodiment. Her analysis of high-touch interactive service work is comprehensive, concise and compelling, drawing on a wealth of case studies as well as her own original research. This timely volume raises a host of fascinating issues and will be an invaluable resource across the social sciences."
--Miriam Glucksmann, University of Essex