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Body Work in Health and Social Care:

Critical Themes, New Agendas
Front Cover
Julia Twigg, Carol Wolkowitz, Rachel Lara Cohen, Sarah Nettleton
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John Wiley & Sons, Sep 7, 2011 - Social Science - 182 pages
The first book to fully explore the multiple ways in which body work features in health and social care and the meanings of this work both for those employed to do it and those on whose bodies they work.
  • Explores the commonalities between different sectors of work, including those outside health and social care
  • Contributions come from an international range of experts
  • Draws on perspectives from across the medical, therapeutic, and care fields
  • Incorporates a variety of methodological approaches, from life history analysis to ethnographic studies and first person accounts

  

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Contents

body work
4
Managing the body work of home care
1981
embodied
2000
body work
1986
Learning to construct bodystories
1993
working on
2001
the body
1987
the embodiment
2004
Body work in respiratory physiological
1995
overseas doctors
1994
The comarking of aged bodies and migrant
2008
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About the author (2011)

Julia Twigg is Professor of Social Policy and Sociology at University of Kent and a specialist in old age, care and embodiment. Her books include The Body in Health and Social Care (2006).

Carol Wolkowitz is Reader in Sociology at University of Warwick and has written widely on gender and the sociology of work and employment. Her books include Bodies at Work (2006).

Rachel Lara Cohen is Lecturer at the University of Surrey, and a specialist in sociology of work and employment. Her books include Feminism Counts: Quantitative Methods and Researching Gender (with C Hughes, 2011).

Sarah Nettleton is a Reader in the Department of Sociology at the University of York and has researched and published on a range of health-related topics, all with a focus on the sociology of the body and embodiment. Her books include Sociology of Health and Illness (2006).

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