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Title: Introduction to Social Analysis


1
Introduction to Social Analysis
  • Week 3, Interviewing workers

2
What does work do to people?
  • One level impacts on their bodies, industrial
    diseases, from miners lung, to RSI.
  • On a social level we know it affects how people
    behave, a teacher talks in a loud voice and is
    for ever explaining things to people. Prison
    warders and traffic wardens as a personality
    type.
  • Are there more profound social effects? We know
    historically it was difficult to turn rural folk,
    peasants into a reliable efficient industrial
    work force. What about the change impact as
    industrial work changes and disappears.

3
What does work do to people?
  • How and why is work constitutive of the person?
  • How do people internalise or resist social
    stratification and unequal relationships?

4
Charlie Chaplin Modern Times
5
  • Why and how do people get a sense of self worth
    from work?
  • Just a cog in the machine
  • Work and it meaning has changed over time
  • The question Who cleans the toilets? is the
    best question to understand the social
    stratification anywhere.
  • How does the person who cleans the toilets
    sustain a positive self identity

6
  • Studies
  • Sennett and Cobb 1972 The Hidden Injuries of
    Class Cambridge University Press 301.44 SEN
  • Account of interviews with working men in Boston.

7
Sennet and Cobb, Hidden Injuries of Class
  • Based around interviews with working men in
    Boston in 1950s.
  • These men were materially more affluent than
    their parents and many were second generation
    immigrants. They had experienced post war boom
    with drastic changes in occupational structure,
    in particular the growth of white collar work and
    the drop in industrial occupations.
  • But to Sennet and Cobb they seemed angry and
    discontent and ambivalent about their
    circumstances. This discontent was not that they
    were poorer than others but more fundamental and
    difficult to articulate.
  • Sennet and Cobb put this down to the consequences
    of class in a meritocractic society. i.e. one in
    which class difference in power and respect is
    legitimated by badges of ability educational
    certification. People are at the top because they
    have demonstrated greater ability (to get to the
    top).

8
Sennet and Cobbs book is about the social
psychology of class relationships.
  • How do those at the bottom of a society which
    sees its-self as a successful individualistic
    meritocracy deal with this situation?
  • Does the manual worker accept that he is
    untalented stupid or how does he reconcile
    himself to his social position?
  • Their subjects were aware of the changes to their
    lives associated with the spread of affluence,
    white collar jobs and the decline of the old
    neighbourhoods had caused. These working people
    of Boston are trying find what position they
    occupy in America as a whole and it is not simply
    counted in terms of material wellbeing.
  • For the people we interviewed, integration into
    American life meant integration into world with
    different symbols of human respect and courtesy,
    a world in which human capabilities are measured
    in terms profoundly alien to those the prevailed
    in the ethnic enclaves of the childhood.
  • Masculinity, strength, manual dexterity,
    toughness, generosity, loyalty, directness . But
    to be middle class is to put on a veneer of
    polite insincerity necessary for white collar
    work, almost to be effeminate. It doesnt produce
    anything valuable only more paper.

9
  • The change in their lives means more to them
    than a the chance, or failure, to acquire middle
    class things. For them history is challenging
    them and their children to become cultured in
    the intellectuals sense of that word, if they
    want to achieve respect in the new American terms
    and toward that challenge they deeply
    ambivalent..
  • They Illustrate this point with the interviews
    with a man Rossarro who they describe as feeling
    illegitimate intruder despite his apparent
    material success with his entrance to the
    middle-class world of neat suburban lawns,
    peaceable families, happy friendships. Despite
    the fact that he gained entree he doesnt believe
    he deserves to be respected even by his better
    educated wife.
  • Rossarro sees poverty... as depriving men of the
    capacity to act rationally, to exercise
    self-control. A poor man, therefore, has to want
    upward mobility in order to establish dignity in
    his own life, and dignity means specifically
    moving toward a position in which he deals with
    the world in some controlled, emotionally
    restrained way.

10
  • Rissarro believes people of a higher class have a
    power to judge him because they seem internally
    more developed human beings and he is afraid
    because they are better armed they will not
    respect him. He feels compelled to justify his
    own position and in his life he has felt
    compelled to put himself up on their level in
    order to earn respect. .- all of this is set
    against a revulsion against the work of educated
    people in the bank and feeling that manual labour
    has more dignity.
  • The American Dream for my father is to see his
    kids get a college education, something he never
    had. he never really forced it on us, but we
    know that this was really going to make him happy
    - that we could get a college degree.

11
  • Sennet suggest people react to power in much more
    complicated ways.
  • Working people feel society has limited their
    freedom more than it has limited that of
    middle-class people - by which they mean society
    has limited their freedom to develop powers
    inside themselves not just restricted how much
    money they can make - but they not rebellious in
    the ordinary sense of the word the are both
    angry and ambivalent about their right be angry

12
  • Sennet and Cobb argue that if we want to make
    sense of these confusing metaphors of self-worth
    we need to recast them as issues of freedom and
    dignity.
  • Class is a system for limiting freedom it limits
    the freedom of the powerful in dealing with other
    people, because the strong are constricted within
    the circle of action that maintains their power
    class constricts the weak more obviously in that
    they must obey commands.
  • They ask What happens to the dignity men see in
    themselves and in each other when their freedom
    is checked by class?

13
  • Ability as the badge of an individual - ability
    is the badge of individual worth,
  • calculations of ability create an image of few
    individual standing out from the mass,
  • that to be an individual by virtue of ability is
    to have the right to transcend ones social
    origins.
  • These are the basic supposition of a society that
    produces feelings of powerlessness and inadequacy
    in the lives of people like Rissarro, Kartides
    and James three of their informants.
  • To connect the ideology and the people we need to
    understand what happens to people when they wear
    badges of ability.
  • Whom shall I marry? I choose, but the secret
    question more destructive, am I the kind of
    person worth loving?
  • Leaves the necessity of proving oneself in a
    meritocratic society.

14
  • An authority judges freedom and dignity
  • What values society spawns to legitimise the few
    come to control the lives of many convince the
    worker that he ought to submit his labour to the
    will of others.
  • This idea of legitimacy is rather more complex
    than it first appears. If a man feels he obeys
    someone he ought to obey what happens to his own
    self-image? The foreman tells a worker he will
    have to work extra hours if he wants to keep his
    job. During an economic depression the workers
    freedom is in this way diminished, of course. But
    if the worker feels the foreman has the right to
    take away his freedom, how can the man feel he
    has any rights, how can he respect himself?
  • Where power becomes legitimate, whatever dignity
    a man accord to this rule, he must necessarily
    deny himself.
  • Now the badge of ability seems the perfect tool
    to legitimise power.
  • this concept of human potential says that the few
    are more richly endowed than the many. Having
    demonstrated more ability and gained more
    dignity by virtue of greater personal power, it
    is logical that they ought to rule the many.
  • the more they /the masses/ surrender their own
    freedom to the few the less chance they have of
    respecting themselves as people with any
    countervailing rights.

15
sacrifice
  • If you feel inadequate and unfulfilled in
    demonstrating your worth, it helps to be doing it
    for the good of someone-else / the kids/. If
    wearing a badge of ability is alienating, wear it
    so that the rewards will give a person whom you
    love a better life. .
  • But that material calculation is not enough.
    Sacrifice as an attempt to redeem the traumas in
    a persons life, become divided into unequal
    classes of experience. By this we mean that a
    working class person has less chance than a
    middle class person of sacrificing successfully.
    Class definitions intrude to derail him from a
    sense that he has made an effective gift of his
    own struggles to someone else. To understand the
    inability of a working class person to sacrifice
    successfully we should start by looking at an
    unspoken social contract demanded by sacrificial
    acts.
  • I have worked hard for you - you must do what I
    want. Sacrifice and fear of betrayal leads to
    competitiveness in childrens achievements. the
    tragedy of the loving sacrifice is that those who
    are pushed to feel grateful cannot
  • The sacrificer feels anger and betrayal at the
    those who dont sacrifice - welfare scroungers
    the shameless who get good sex, relaxation, fun
    time.
  • Sacrifice then legitimises a person view of
    himself as an individual with the right to feel
    anger. That is anger of peculiar focused sort in
    setting you off as an individual, a virtuous
    person compared to less forceful others,
    self-denial makes possible the ultimate
    perversion of love, it permits you to practice
    that most insidious and devastating form of
    self-righteousness where you, oppressed, in your
    anger turn on others who are also oppressed
    rather than on those intangible, impersonal
    forces that have made you all vulnerable.

16
  • The striving to become a developed and therefore
    respect-able person is an incentive that keeps
    men consuming and working hard.
  • As we have argued throughout this book, the
    power of class today is not that it makes
    individual psychology reflect the behaviour of
    the system - we reject for instance Marcuses
    idea that people on the bottom have tastes
    similar to those on the top and therefore keep
    the Establishment alive. Rather the way in which
    people try to keep free of the emotional grip of
    the social structure, unintentionally
    systematically in aggregate keeps the class order
    going.

17
.
  • Next week
  • Pei-Chia Lan 2006 Global Cinderellas Migrant
    Domestics and Newly Rich Employers in Taiwan Duke
    University Press.

18
  • Lamont, Michele, 2000 The dignity of working men
    morality and the boundaries of race, class, and
    immigration New York Russell Sage Foundation,
    Harvard University Press,
  • Contrasts French and American perspectives on
    race and class and the way people construct
    valued identities. A key difference being that is
    France but not the US, race is constructed as a
    badge of foreign or immigrant status.

19
  • Arlie Hochschilde (1983) The Managed Heart
  • A study of emotional work, flight attendants (air
    hostesses) and debt collectors.

20
  • Links to Goffman, who ideas we explore next week,
    through a discussion of acting.
  • She distinguished surface acting, being able to
    give the impression of emotion through control of
    facial muscles and imitative action which is
    fragile and limited in sustainability
  • from method acting, in which through
    imaginatively thinking into a situation real
    emotions are felt which thus expressed in their
    full, complex and more sustainable manner

21
Emotion as signal
  • One model of emotion as simply a biological
    reponses felt in as a consequence of particular
    stimulii.
  • But emotion is felt as an interaction between the
    body and the conscious brain and active subject.
  • People can conjure up emotions, feel them and
    change them by conscious thought people try and
    manipulate their mood and feelings.
  • Emotions give a signal as to feelings and
    behaviour which are not governed by rational or
    calculative decisions. We wouldnt be human
    without emotion. How emotions are labelled and
    interpreted is cultural

22
  • Training schools
  • Advice on how to maintain commercially desirable
    attitudes and behaviour towards passengers and
    clients.
  • Displacement, think positively, think of the
    drunk with the wandering hands as a child, think
    that his wife has just died

23
  • Gendered division of emotional labour
  • As a result of this status effect, flight
    attending is one sort of job for a woman and
    another sort of job for a man. For a man the
    principal hidden task is to maintain his identity
    as a man in a womans occupation and
    occasionally to cope with tough passengers for
    female flight attendants. For a woman, the
    principle hidden task is to deal with the status
    effect the absence of a social shield against
    the displaced anger and frustration of
    passengers.
  • Male authority and willingness of others to obey
  • Hostess sexual and domestic (food)
    availability. Female mothering nurturing role
  • Male aggression as required for debt collecting

24
  • Last chapter is called the search for
    authenticity
  • The human costs of emotional labour
  • Acting and knowing ones true self
  • Those who perform emotional labor in the course
    of giving service are like those who perform
    physical labor in the course of making things
    both are subject to the rules of mass production.
    But when the product- the thing to be engineered,
    mass-produced, and subjected to speed up and
    slowdown is a smile, a mood, a feeling, or a
    relationship, it come to belong more to the
    organization and less to the self. And so in the
    country that most publicly celebrates the
    individual, more people privately wonder, without
    tracing the questions to its deepest social root
    What do I really feel?
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