Social skills, New Capitalism, and power in social work
In: Nordic Social Work Research, Volume 9, Issue 3, p. 220-234
ISSN: 2156-8588
19 results
Sort by:
In: Nordic Social Work Research, Volume 9, Issue 3, p. 220-234
ISSN: 2156-8588
In: Qualitative studies, Volume 3, Issue 2, p. 115-132
ISSN: 1903-7031
The article argues that interactions in qualitative interviews and ethnography can be analyzed as relations between intersectional social positions. It draws attention to the importance of class and geographical location in such analysis. It further argues that such interactions work through typifications, that they have a power dimension and that they entail processes of identity formation. The identities being offered through these processes can, however, be negotiated or resisted. The article then analyses such interactions as they were experienced in two research projects the author participated in: His PhD project about young marginalized ethnic minority men, and the collective project INTERLOC which focused on the interplay between gender, class, ethnicity and 'race' in an underprivileged Danish suburb. It is demonstrated that relationality influences the assumptions research participants have about the researcher. It is also demonstrated that the research encounter entails powerful mechanism of identity formation. The informants, however, sometimes resist these processes resulting in blurred and unstable, sometimes antagonistic, power relations. It is finally argued that analyses of such interactions can provide central insight into the subject studied.
In: Qualitative studies, Volume 2, Issue 2, p. 63-78
ISSN: 1903-7031
The article examines the potentials of the concept of othering to describe identity formation among ethnic minorities. First, it outlines the history of the concept, its contemporary use, as well as some criticisms. Then it is argued that young ethnic minority men in Denmark are subject to intersectional othering, which contains elements of exoticist fascination of the other. On the basis of ethnographic material, it is analysed how young marginalized ethnic minority men react to othering. Two types of reactions are illustrated: 1) capitalization on being positioned as the other, and 2) refusing to occupy the position of the other by disidentification and claims to normality. Finally, it is argued that the concept of othering is well suited for understanding the power structures as well as the historic symbolic meanings conditioning such identity formation, but problematic in terms of agency.
In: Norma: Nordic journal for masculinity studies, Volume 5, Issue 1, p. 6-26
ISSN: 1890-2146
In: Young: Nordic journal of youth research, Volume 14, Issue 3, p. 257-276
ISSN: 1741-3222
The aim of this article is to contribute to the rethinking of the notion of subcultural capital as coined by Sarah Thornton. Drawing on Bourdieu, I argue that Thornton's original work on the notion is flawed by a reluctance to devote analytical attention to the social position and other socio-structural variables of the participants in the subculture. With my fieldwork among underprivileged young men of non-Danish ethnic origin as the point of departure, I reason that a sociological grasp on hierarchical differentiation and intersections between different socio-structural variables is necessary to explain and understand subcultures and subcultural capital adequately. The relation between the subculture and its surroundings is best understood by focusing on what is appreciated within the subculture (i.e. subculture capital) and at the same time analytically situating the subculture in terms of class, gender, ethnicity and 'race'.
In: Kvinder, køn og forskning, Issue 2-3
The current Danish reception of the concept of intersectionality has largely been of a poststructuralist bend. However, the history of the concept is not necessarily as tightly related to poststructuralist theory as often assumed. Although the contributions produced by this reception must be recognised, the poststructuralist version of intersectionality is problematic from a specific sociological position. When social categories are presented as something people do, the reality of social differentiation is downplayed. Poststructuralist thinking rests on an inadequate conception of the material, as this form of thought tends to theorize this as another type of discourse or as a consequence of discourse. It furthermore tends to homogenise the logics underlying different forms of social differentiation. These points are illustrated by the works of Bourgeois and Wacquant where socio-cultural interpretations are transformed by changes on a material level.
In: Acta sociologica: journal of the Scandinavian Sociological Association, Volume 49, Issue 1, p. 103-105
ISSN: 1502-3869
In: Distinktion: scandinavian journal of social theory, Volume 17, Issue 1, p. 94-108
ISSN: 2159-9149
In: Kvinder, køn og forskning, Issue 2-3
Intersectionality as embodiment. This article explores intersectionality as embodiment, arguing that by taking embodiment into account broader possibilities of intersectional analysis can be unfolded. Inspired by phenomenological theories of embodied experience and the mimetic faculty, the article suggests that intersectionality can be understood as embodied experience. Following this thinking embodiment is radically conditioned as well as a site of agency. This has implications for the understanding of structures, agency as well as their interrelation.
In: Studies in conflict and terrorism, p. 1-21
ISSN: 1521-0731
In: Studies in conflict and terrorism, Volume 46, Issue 12, p. 2521-2537
ISSN: 1521-0731
In: Tidsskrift for kjønnsforskning, Volume 44, Issue 2, p. 104-117
ISSN: 1891-1781
In: Norma: Nordic journal for masculinity studies, Volume 9, Issue 1, p. 60-75
ISSN: 1890-2146
In: Nordic Journal of Migration Research, Volume 1, Issue 3, p. 146
ISSN: 1799-649X
In: Dansk sociologi: tidsskrift udgivet af Dansk Sociologforening, Volume 22, Issue 4, p. 71-88
ISSN: 0905-5908
Intersektionalitetsbegrebet indebærer, at sociale differentieringsformer som køn, klasse, etnicitet og "race" er gensidigt konstituerende både på et identitetsmæssigt og strukturelt niveau. Begrebet har haft stor gennemslagskraft og bidraget positivt til fornyelse af dansk og international kønsforskning. Da begrebet rummer potentialer til analyser af komplekse sociale differentieringer, er det imidlertid også relevant for en bredere sociologi. Nutidige højt differentierede samfund fordrer således begreber og metodologier, som er egnede til at gribe kompleksitet.
Intersektionalitetstænkningen har teorihistoriske rødder i amerikansk sort standpunktsfeminisme. I Danmark blev begrebet først anvendt af poststrukturalistiske socialpsykologer, som gentænkte det og gjorde det velegnet til at analysere, hvordan komplekse identiteter skabes i hverdagslivet. Senere er begrebet blevet anvendt af kønsforskere med andre faglige og videnskabsteoretiske udgangspunkter.
I artiklen fremhæves det, at intersektionalitetsbegrebet kan anvendes til at producere forskellige typer sociologisk viden. I den forbindelse præsenteres en typologi over forskellige tilgange til intersektionalitetsanalyser, som bruges som afsæt til at skitsere tre eksempler på analyser af social ulighed og eksklusion.
ENGELSK ABSTRACT:
Sune Qvotrup Jensen and Ann-Dorte Christensen: Inter-sectionality as a Sociological Concept
Contemporary highly differentiated societies require concepts and methodologies which are suited for grasping complexity. Intersectionality is a fruitful approach to analyze this complexity because social forms of differentiation such as gender, class, ethnicity and "race" are understood as mutually co-constructing at the level of individual identities and at the level of social structures. Intersectionality is a travelling concept which is theoretically rooted in black American feminism. In Denmark, the concept was first used by post-structuralist social psychologists, who adapted it to analyzing how complex identities were created in everyday life. Later on the concept was later taken up by gender researchers within the social sciences. This article analyses how the concept of intersectionality can be used to produce different types of sociological knowledge. It introduces a typology of approaches to intersectionality analyses, which serves as the backdrop for three examples of analyses of social inequality and exclusion.
Key words: Intersectionality, complexity, social differentiation, gender, class, ethnicity.