An intersectional analysis of male caregiving in South African palliative care: Identifying disruptive potential in reinventions of white, hegemonic masculinity

Type Journal Article - Agenda
Title An intersectional analysis of male caregiving in South African palliative care: Identifying disruptive potential in reinventions of white, hegemonic masculinity
Author(s)
Volume 31
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
Page numbers 78-90
URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10130950.2017.1357371
Abstract
Care work is often feminised and invisible. Intangible components of care, such as emotional labour, are rarely recognised as economically valuable. Men engaging in care work can be stigmatised or simply made invisible for non-conformance to gender norms (Dworzanowski-Venter, 2008). Mburu et al (2014) and Chikovore et al (2016) have studied masculinity from an intersectional perspective, but male caregiving has not enjoyed sufficient intersectional focus. Intersectional analysis of male caregiving has the twin benefits of making ‘women’s work’ visible and finding ways to keep men involved in caring occupations. I foreground the class-gender intersection in this study of black male caregivers as emotional labourers involved in palliative care work in Gauteng (2005–2013). Informal AIDS care and specialist oncology nursing are contrasting cases of male care work presented in this article.

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