an article by Franz Erhard (University of Leipzig, Germany) published in Journal of Poverty and Social Justice Volume 28 Number 1 (February 2020)
Abstract
In this paper, I argue that we look through the lens of family care to show how economic scarcity translates into an actual experience of everyday life.
Referring to analyses from narrative interviews with people in deprived life circumstances who live across the UK and the Republic of Ireland, I introduce care work as one situational context in which precarious living conditions become tangible for my interviewees. In addition,
I demonstrate that gendered expectations concerning mother- and father-hood make a difference for how women and men experience poverty. Yet, as stereotypical as this may seem, there is more to tell.
Labels:
care_work, experience, gender, poverty,
This is one of the times when I really want to read the whole article but it’s only available to the likes of me through British Library Readership or purchase. The former it will have to be; I’m not that interested.
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