Frith1998

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Frith1998
BibType ARTICLE
Key Frith1998
Author(s) Hannah Frith, Celia Kitzinger
Title “Emotion Work” as a Participant Resource: A Feminist Analysis of Young Women's Talk-in-Interaction
Editor(s)
Tag(s) emotion work, sexual negotiations, self-report
Publisher
Year 1998
Language
City
Month
Journal Annual Review of Sociology
Volume 32
Number 2
Pages 299–320
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/0038038598032002005
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper explores and develops the concept of "emotion work" as used by young women talking about sexual negotiation. It suggests that "emotion work" should be viewed not simply as an analyst resource of use to social scientists, but also as a participant resource used by ordinary social members. Existing research on emotion work generally treats self-report data as offering a "transparent" window through which the behaviour "behind the talk" can be (more or less adequately) assessed. This paper proposes instead that self-report data should be considered as talk-in-interaction. Using data from our own research on young women's experiences of refusing sex, we show how young women's talk about (what analysts call) "emotion work" can be analysed as a participant resource through which young women construct consensual versions of men as emotional weaklings, and portray themselves as active agents who are knowledgeable about heterosexual relationships. The implications of this analytic shift are explored in relation to feminist approaches to sexual coercion, and with reference to qualitative data analysis more generally.

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