Our article aims at refocusing the debate in privilege studies from tackling the invisibility to challenging justifications of gender privilege. Focusing on instances in which men acknowledge that they receive preferential treatment, this study sheds light on how privilege is perceived and talked about in interviews with men in female‐dominated occupations. In contrast to existing literature on the invisibility of privilege to the privileged, our analysis shows that the privileging of men is indeed known to them. However, our interviewees then employ specific discursive strategies to actively reframe and thereby silence privilege. They either justify privilege as an individual achievement or as a natural advantage of male bodies. In our discussion, we show how these discursive reframings build on existing discourses on gendered bodies and neoliberal subjectivity. Based on our key argument that gendered privilege is not invisible, but it is acknowledged and then actively reframed and thereby silenced, we argue for expanding the focus of privilege studies: Instead of primarily investing in making privilege visible to those who have it, we need to challenge the discourses that allow for reframing and silencing it.
In this chapter, Marisol Keller sheds the light on subjectivities and living realities of gig workers that work on digital care platforms. She connects her autoethnographic empirical data with the idea of platform urbanism and the understanding of platforms as critical infrastructures in cities. Her findings present how workers navigate urban spaces in rhythms demanded by the platforms and thereby (re)negotiate power imbalances that are deliberately produced by the platform. Her conclusions unveil the enormous power of the platforms in shaping spatial and temporal patterns of gig workers and care labor in today's cities.
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