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  1. Fake kindness, caring and symbolic violence.Damien Contandriopoulos, Natalie Stake-Doucet & Joanna Schilling - forthcoming - Nursing Ethics.
    The article starts by offering a definition of fake kindness focused on the dissociation between the behavioural components of kindness and the intent to sincerely pay some heed to the needs of others. Using the sociological theory of Pierre Bourdieu, this definition is then used to articulate how fake kindness can be conceptualized as a specific form of symbolic violence. Such a view allows explanations as to how and why the prevalence and effectiveness of fake kindness vary according to microsociological (...)
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  • Home Care in America: The Urgent Challenge of Putting Ethical Care into Practice.Coleman Solis, Kevin T. Mintz, David Wasserman, Kathleen Fenton & Marion Danis - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (3):25-34.
    Home care is one of the fastest‐growing industries in the United States, providing valuable opportunities for millions of older adults and people with disabilities to live at home rather than in institutional settings. Home care workers assist clients with essential activities of daily living, but their wages and working conditions generally fail to reflect the importance of their work. Drawing on the work of Eva Feder Kittay and other care ethicists, we argue that good care involves attending to the needs (...)
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  • Examining the role of nurse executives in homecare through the lens of the Sociology of Ignorance and Critical Management Studies.Lisa Ashley & Amélie Perron - 2024 - Nursing Philosophy 25 (1):e12445.
    This article presents a novel theoretical approach to explore nurse executives’ paradoxical identity and agency of executive and nurse in homecare organizations. This complex phenomenon has yet to be well theorized or analyzed. Through a synthesis of literature, we demonstrate that Critical Management Studies, as informed by Foucault, and the Sociology of Ignorance, can create a different understanding of the complex interplay between knowledge and nonknowledge (ignorance) that positions nurse executives in both influential and precarious ways in homecare organizations. This (...)
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  • A Foucauldian discourse analysis of media reporting on the nurse‐as‐hero during COVID‐19.Maggie Boulton, Anna Garnett & Fiona Webster - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry.
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  • Being and becoming a nurse: Toward an ontological and reflexive turn in first‐year nursing education.Karen Jenkins, Elizabeth Anne Kinsella & Sandra DeLuca - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry.
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  • How nurses’ use of language creates meaning about healthcare users and nursing practice.Sherry Dahlke & Kathleen F. Hunter - 2020 - Nursing Inquiry 27 (3):e12346.
    Nursing practice occurs in the context of conversations with healthcare users, other healthcare professionals, and healthcare institutions. This discussion paper draws on symbolic interactionism and Fairclough's method of critical discourse analysis to examine language that nurses use to describe the people in their care and their practice. We discuss how nurses’ use of language constructs meaning about healthcare users and their own work. Through language, nurses are articulating what they believe about healthcare users and nursing practice. We argue that the (...)
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