Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People

Since some decades, nursing homes for elderly people are discussed as “total institutions” in the sense of Erving Goffman. However, this line of research has not clarified yet as to how the creation of a totalizing nursing home is actually achieved on the basis of everyday practices and interactions...

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Main Author: Lucia Artner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Sociology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsoc.2018.00030/full
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spelling doaj-9b40ee80d94b4b9891f2a904d463626b2020-11-24T21:47:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sociology2297-77752018-10-01310.3389/fsoc.2018.00030337183Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly PeopleLucia ArtnerSince some decades, nursing homes for elderly people are discussed as “total institutions” in the sense of Erving Goffman. However, this line of research has not clarified yet as to how the creation of a totalizing nursing home is actually achieved on the basis of everyday practices and interactions. In my contribution I address this research gap by looking at how material and spatial arrangements in nursing homes for elderly people affect the ways its residents are socially constructed. By drawing on Goffman's ideas on the creation and presentation of the self, I engage with the question of how the placement and handling of material objects in nursing interactions lead to the institutionalization of a resident's self: Empirical examples of how materialities are deployed demonstrate how residents are stripped of their self-identity and how nursing staff members exercise rigid control over their everyday lives. Yet, it is also shown how the usage of material objects help residents to subvert some of these practices. I argue that looking at the material and spatial arrangements of a nursing home on a micro-level of social interactions helps us especially in reconstructing those often latent, inconspicuous and overseen processes in which a totalizing environment is created.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsoc.2018.00030/fullcare and nursing for elderly peopletotal institutionmaterialities in and of nursing and carematerial care studiesorganization ethnography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucia Artner
spellingShingle Lucia Artner
Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People
Frontiers in Sociology
care and nursing for elderly people
total institution
materialities in and of nursing and care
material care studies
organization ethnography
author_facet Lucia Artner
author_sort Lucia Artner
title Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People
title_short Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People
title_full Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People
title_fullStr Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People
title_full_unstemmed Materialities in and of Institutional Care for Elderly People
title_sort materialities in and of institutional care for elderly people
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sociology
issn 2297-7775
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Since some decades, nursing homes for elderly people are discussed as “total institutions” in the sense of Erving Goffman. However, this line of research has not clarified yet as to how the creation of a totalizing nursing home is actually achieved on the basis of everyday practices and interactions. In my contribution I address this research gap by looking at how material and spatial arrangements in nursing homes for elderly people affect the ways its residents are socially constructed. By drawing on Goffman's ideas on the creation and presentation of the self, I engage with the question of how the placement and handling of material objects in nursing interactions lead to the institutionalization of a resident's self: Empirical examples of how materialities are deployed demonstrate how residents are stripped of their self-identity and how nursing staff members exercise rigid control over their everyday lives. Yet, it is also shown how the usage of material objects help residents to subvert some of these practices. I argue that looking at the material and spatial arrangements of a nursing home on a micro-level of social interactions helps us especially in reconstructing those often latent, inconspicuous and overseen processes in which a totalizing environment is created.
topic care and nursing for elderly people
total institution
materialities in and of nursing and care
material care studies
organization ethnography
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsoc.2018.00030/full
work_keys_str_mv AT luciaartner materialitiesinandofinstitutionalcareforelderlypeople
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