Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Talking about care/caring about talk
- one Constructions of care: the family, difficulties and policy
- two Biographies, family histories and discursive psychology
- three Accounts of care and accounting for care: repertoires in talk
- four Embedding difficulties in talk about care relationships
- five Mapping family history: the genealogy of difficulties and care
- six Two sides to the care story: illustrating the analytic potential
- seven Talking about family care: practice implications
- References
- Appendix A Biographical summaries of participants
- Appendix B Transcription notations
- Appendix C Methods
- Index
- Also available from The Policy Press
Introduction: Talking about care/caring about talk
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Talking about care/caring about talk
- one Constructions of care: the family, difficulties and policy
- two Biographies, family histories and discursive psychology
- three Accounts of care and accounting for care: repertoires in talk
- four Embedding difficulties in talk about care relationships
- five Mapping family history: the genealogy of difficulties and care
- six Two sides to the care story: illustrating the analytic potential
- seven Talking about family care: practice implications
- References
- Appendix A Biographical summaries of participants
- Appendix B Transcription notations
- Appendix C Methods
- Index
- Also available from The Policy Press
Summary
Care is diverse and complex. Its diversity is marked by the number of different activities that it can indicate, from assistance with washing and dressing, to ensuring medication is taken or completing household chores. The complexity of care does not necessarily arise from these instrumental or physical tasks, but from the negotiation of relationships and emotional ties, where care is given and received. What is common across care is its mode of delivery; care is always mediated by relationships. Understanding relationships therefore plays an important role in offering support, particularly when difficulties come about.
In this book I argue for one particular approach in developing insights into care. I suggest that paying attention to the detail of the way people talk about their care relationships can illuminate how they manage difficulties, and how practitioners might work most helpfully with them.
The following chapters are a studied account of how people talk about their experiences, with a particular focus on the troubles involved in care. The book is based on a series of research interviews conducted with 12 people involved in informal (family) care. The aim in introducing people’s personal accounts is not to pathologise the individuals concerned, nor their relationships. It is not to set them apart from other people by indicating that the difficulties they encounter are out of the ordinary. Quite the opposite is the case. One of the main arguments of this book is to underline the normality and prevalence of difficulties in relationships. These people are not unique in the troubles they articulate, nor in their style of expressing difficulties; a focused analysis of the minutiae of conversations will reveal similarities in all relationships. This book explores in detail the way that people talk about their care relationships, and asserts that, in hearing talk about care, one must begin to care about talk.
Talking about care: a polarity in the literature
The informal care literature has formed a substantial backdrop to this book, both in terms of contextualising it within the field, and in drawing attention to the less developed and understood areas. In particular, a number of polarities are apparent.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Talking about CareTwo Sides to the Story, pp. 1 - 10Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2005