Weeding Out the Weak: Labor, Gender, and Disability in a U.S. Fossil Fuel Boomtown

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY Journal of Contemporary Ethnography Pub Date : 2023-02-07 DOI:10.1177/08912416231153059
C. Labuski
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Abstract

COVID-19 has radically reshaped the labor dreams of many U.S. workers. This essay uses pre-pandemic fieldwork in an oil and gas “boomtown” to consider post-work imaginaries in the wake and midst of COVID-19. I use feminist and disability studies perspectives to argue that economic analyses must not only move beyond the discourse of “jobs” but must also attend to gender-based and ableist modes of discrimination that persist even in so-called booming economies. I posit the figure of the economically productive worker, asking how routine practices of identity-shaped discrimination undermine the capacities of some to embody this figure. My interview-derived and ethnographic data suggest that economic self-sufficiency is a woefully inadequate model for meeting the material needs of people, and that labor innovations such as a universal basic income are necessary to achieve the kinds of flourishing sought by those participating in the “great resignation.”
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淘汰弱者:美国化石燃料繁荣时期的劳工、性别和残疾
新冠肺炎从根本上重塑了许多美国工人的劳动梦想。本文利用疫情前在一个石油和天然气“繁荣城市”的实地考察,思考新冠肺炎之后和之中的工作后想象。我从女权主义和残疾研究的角度认为,经济分析不仅必须超越“就业”的话语,还必须关注即使在所谓的蓬勃发展的经济中也存在的基于性别和能力主义的歧视模式。我假设了经济生产型工人的形象,询问身份歧视的常规做法如何削弱了一些人体现这一形象的能力。我的采访和民族志数据表明,经济自给自足在满足人们的物质需求方面远远不够,而全民基本收入等劳动创新对于实现那些参与“大辞职”的人所寻求的繁荣是必要的
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The Journal of Contemporary Ethnography publishes in-depth investigations of diverse people interacting in their natural environments to produce and communicate meaning. At its best, ethnography captures the strange in the familiar and the familiar in the strange. JCE is committed to pushing the boundaries of ethnographic discovery by building upon its 30+ year tradition of top notch scholarship.
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