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Identity, life history and commitment to welfare [electronic resource] /

by Hoggett, Paul; Beedell, Phoebe; Jimenez, Luis; Mayo, Marj; Miller, Chris.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleDescription: p. 689-704.Online resources: Click here to access full-text article In: Journal of Social Policy 2006, Vol. 35, Issue 4Summary: Using detailed extracts from two life histories, this article examines the nature of the personal identifications that often underpin the commitment of welfare workers to their jobs. We explore the paradox that it is those identifications such as class and gender, mediated through individual biography, that fix the ‘self as object’ and that also provide us with the resources for self-transformation. In this respect, the article not only throws light upon the psychical and emotional roots of commitment to the other, but also upon some of the impasses ‘identity theory’ currently finds itself in.
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Using detailed extracts from two life histories, this article examines the nature of the personal identifications that often underpin the commitment of welfare workers to their jobs. We explore the paradox that it is those identifications such as class and gender, mediated through individual biography, that fix the ‘self as object’ and that also provide us with the resources for self-transformation. In this respect, the article not only throws light upon the psychical and emotional roots of commitment to the other, but also upon some of the impasses ‘identity theory’ currently finds itself in.

Mode of access: Internet.


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