Defining Work: Gender, Professional Work, and the Case of Rural ClergyMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2006 M11 24 - 216 páginas Based on interviews with forty rural Protestant clergy, Mellow argues that male and female clergy challenge gendered definitions of work by focusing on obligation, context, visibility, and time. She also considers how clergy's work is shaped by the rural setting, arguing that we must consider how work is "placed" as well as gendered. |
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... parishioners are also their neighbours, and their families are expected to be involved in their professional world. Clergy are also of interest because they are part of an organizational division of labour that includes volunteers, and ...
... parishioners are also their neighbours, and their families are expected to be involved in their professional world. Clergy are also of interest because they are part of an organizational division of labour that includes volunteers, and ...
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... there for clergy themselves – although they develop strategies for making sense of this ambiguity – and also for their parishioners and others who observe them. Because their occupational culture means they may find themselves “at.
... there for clergy themselves – although they develop strategies for making sense of this ambiguity – and also for their parishioners and others who observe them. Because their occupational culture means they may find themselves “at.
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... parishioners. In other words, I have focused on areas which have usually been marginalized in the conventional separation of work and nonwork. The chapters which follow give more detail about the work clergy do, particularly these grey ...
... parishioners. In other words, I have focused on areas which have usually been marginalized in the conventional separation of work and nonwork. The chapters which follow give more detail about the work clergy do, particularly these grey ...
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... parishioners. At times, clergy themselves have no difficulty in delineating what work is – although it may not be apparent to their parishioners – while in other circumstances, professional and private life may merge to the point where ...
... parishioners. At times, clergy themselves have no difficulty in delineating what work is – although it may not be apparent to their parishioners – while in other circumstances, professional and private life may merge to the point where ...
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Contenido
Methodology and Respondents | |
An Essential Component of the Profession | |
Defining Work in Accountable Ways | |
Defining Emotional Boundaries | |
Negotiating the Boundary between Public and Private | |
Conclusion | |
Methodological Notes | |
Coding Categories | |
Notes | |
Bibliography | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Defining Work: Gender, Professional Work, and the Case of Rural Clergy Muriel Mellow Vista previa limitada - 2014 |
Defining Work: Gender, Professional Work, and the Case of Rural Clergy Muriel Mellow Sin vista previa disponible - 2006 |
Términos y frases comunes
accounts ambiguity argue attending boundaries Carroll Census Agglomerations Chapter church committees Church of Canada clergy’s codes committees conceptualization congregational expectations congregational members context define definitions demands described discussion domain emotional caregiving emotional labour example experience feeling rules female clergy female respondents feminine feminist feminist theology feminized formal friends gender relations Glucksmann Hargrove Hochschild housework husbands important individuals informants interviews involved Lebans legitimate leisure linked lived Lummis male clergy male respondents manse men’s minister minister’s ministers of religion non-work norms notion obligation occupational masculinity one’s organization parishioners particular pastoral charge people’s presbytery problematic profession public and private reproduce role rural clergy rural setting Saugeres Seron and Ferris situations social Sociology sphere spouses Statistics Canada strategies suggested talk Tancred understanding United Church University of Lethbridge unpaid urban visible visiting volunteer wives women workers Zikmund