2022
DOI: 10.1177/00380261221140240
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Dirt, decency and the symbolic boundaries of caregiving in residential homes for older people

Abstract: This article draws upon an ethnography of two differently-priced UK residential care homes for older people. Informed by recent scholarship on the materialities of care, together with separate theoretical contributions by Mary Douglas and Émile Durkheim, I examine the spatial and material organisation of care work. I sketch out care workers’ attitudes and practices concerning hygiene and bodily waste, and how these are established and reaffirmed through the marking out of boundaries between materials, spaces a… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…It is worth noting, too, the wealth of scholarship across other disciplines—including social policy and ageing studies/critical gerontology (e.g. Garthwaite, 2015; Johnson, 2023; Moffatt & Noble, 2015)—and drawing upon different theoretical paradigms—including feminist theory, critical race theory, sexuality studies and queer theory (e.g. Goodley, 2011; Schalk & Kim, 2020)—which have significant potential to inform both medical sociology and disability studies (indeed, some is published in Sociology of Health and Illness ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is worth noting, too, the wealth of scholarship across other disciplines—including social policy and ageing studies/critical gerontology (e.g. Garthwaite, 2015; Johnson, 2023; Moffatt & Noble, 2015)—and drawing upon different theoretical paradigms—including feminist theory, critical race theory, sexuality studies and queer theory (e.g. Goodley, 2011; Schalk & Kim, 2020)—which have significant potential to inform both medical sociology and disability studies (indeed, some is published in Sociology of Health and Illness ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%