Emotional Labor : The Invisible Work Shaping Our Lives and How to Claim Our Power
(2023)

Nonfiction

eAudiobook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Macmillan Audio, 2023
Made available through hoopla
EDITION
Unabridged
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource (1 audio file (8hr., 51 min.)) : digital

ISBN/ISSN
9781250882592 MWT16747803, 1250882591 16747803
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Read by Rose Hackman

This program is read by the author. For readers of Fair Play by Eve Rodsky and Burnout by Emily Nagoski and Amelia Nagoski comes a scathing, deeply-researched foray into the invisible, uncompensated work women perform every day. We're tired. A stranger insists you "smile more," even as you navigate a high-stress environment or grating commute. A mother is expected to oversee every last detail of domestic life. A nurse works on the front line, worried about her own health, but has to put on a brave face for her patients. A young professional is denied promotion for being deemed abrasive instead of placating her boss. Nearly every day, we find ourselves forced to edit our emotions to accommodate and elevate the emotions of others. Too many of us are asked to perform this exhausting, draining work at no extra cost, especially if we're women or people of color. Emotional labor is essential to our society and economy, but it's so often invisible. In this groundbreaking, journalistic deep dive, Rose Hackman shares the stories of hundreds of women, tracing the history of this kind of work and exposing common manifestations of the phenomenon. But Hackman doesn't simply diagnose a problem-she empowers us to combat this insidious force and forge pathways for radical evolution, justice, and change. Drawing on years of research and hundreds of interviews, you'll learn: · How emotional labor pervades our workplaces, from the bustling food service industry to the halls of corporate America · How race, gender, and class unequally shape the load we carry · Strategies for leveling the imbalances that contaminate our relationships, social circles, and households · Empowering tools to stop anyone from gaslighting you into thinking the work you are doing is not real work Emotional labor is real, but it no longer has to be our burden alone. By recognizing its value and insisting on its shared responsibility, we can set ourselves free and forge a path to a world where empathy, love, and caregiving claim their rightful power. A Macmillan Audio production from Flatiron Books. Rose Hackman is a British journalist based in Detroit. Her work on gender, race, labor, policing, housing and the environment-published in The Guardian-has brought international attention to overlooked American policy issues, historically entrenched injustices, and complicated social mores. Emotional Labor is her first book. "An urgent look at emotional labor and its various intersections that many of us only recognize as entering 'womanhood' - that we should edit the expression of our emotions to accommodate and elevate others. She challenges that the invisible work of women is not only an expectation of society but also a burden that is impossible to sustain. Hackman's words reveal the agency of women is still possible while the power of care, empathy, and love in action can lead us to the best in our humanity." - Eve Rodsky, New York Times bestselling author of Fair Play and National Bestseller Find Your Unicorn Space "In this welcome and informative volume, Hackman gives us a bracing, wide-angle view of the many hidden theaters of emotional labor-at the kitchen sink, check-out counter, corporate meeting. Done wisely, emotional labor is a great gift to civilization we should all know about-intimately." - Arlie Hochschild, author of National Book Award finalist Strangers in Their Own Land and the New York Times bestseller The Second Shift "Expertly blending case studies and statistics, this is a profound call for reorienting 'our fundamental value systems.'" - Publishers Weekly "This is an inspiring, infuriating study of the toll it takes on people when they're expected to smile, while taking on more and exhausting responsibilities without getting paid more." -Library Journal, starred review "As she critiques the neoliberalism that has given rise to

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