From Doing Work to Talking Work: Renegotiating Knowing, Doing, and Identity
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-17, 02:05authored byR Iedema, H Scheeres
This paper considers the ways in which work is changing in two very different sites: a gaming machine factory and a metropolitan teaching hospital. In addition, the paper explores the implications of these changes for our own work as researchers and discourse analysts. In comparing the hospital and the factory, and in relating these sites to academia, we aim to bring out commonalities between what is happening to workers in factory occupations and those who work as expert professionals. We will argue that, in the contemporary workplace, workers across a variety of sites are being confronted with having to renegotiate their knowing, their doing, and their worker identity. Drawing on empirical evidence, we focus on how factory employees deploy a team building device called 'Problem Solving Plus', and on how different clinicians co-formulate a multi-disciplinary 'Clinical Pathway', to demonstrate that these two phenomena represent discursive strategies that require both kinds of workers to produce discourse that goes outside the boundaries of their conventional worker habitus. As new discourse practices, these two phenomena are central to reconstituting occupational and professional work and knowledge, and to problematizing identity. The paper concludes that these strategies are part of a new textualization of work (Darville 1995; Jackson 2000), and represent what we might term the 'reflexivization' of worker identity.
History
Publication title
Applied Linguistics
Volume
24
Issue
3
Pagination
316-337
ISSN
0142-6001
Department/School
Nursing
Publisher
Oxford Univ Press
Publication status
Published
Place of publication
Great Clarendon St, Oxford, England, Ox2 6Dp
Socio-economic Objectives
280116 Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture