Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK

This thesis investigates the meaning of care in our societies. Everyone will be concerned with care in some way at some point in his/her life. In the UK and Austria economic and social developments challenge traditional family arrangements while the need for care for the elderly is increasing. But h...

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Main Author: Weicht, Bernhard
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11414/
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author Weicht, Bernhard
author_facet Weicht, Bernhard
author_sort Weicht, Bernhard
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis investigates the meaning of care in our societies. Everyone will be concerned with care in some way at some point in his/her life. In the UK and Austria economic and social developments challenge traditional family arrangements while the need for care for the elderly is increasing. But how do we understand care and which meaning does care have for us, for our relationships, for our identities and for our understanding of society? How do we want to live together, and how do we want to experience the process of ageing? Understanding the construction of care helps to understand aspects of people’s ideals, motives, attitudes, imaginations, aspirations and desires in life. This study bridges the theoretical level of broad moral questions and their application in particular situations. Utilising Critical Discourse Analysis in combination with a sample of newspapers and the organisation of focus groups in each country enable an identification of the ‘moral grammar’ of care, i.e. the discourses in which care is constructed. The result is an everyday morality, referring to the way people understand and make sense of their experiences, histories and emotions about care for elderly people. This moral construction situates care in opposition to an economisation and/or individualisation of society. Care reflects an ambivalent desire of people which can be described as being there for each other. By exploring themes such as relationships, home, community, independence and the commodification of care this thesis demonstrates that, on the one hand, moral assumptions and ideals are underlying the organisation of care and, on the other hand, care itself represents an ideal of being moral. This construction has important consequences for all those involved in caring relationships (as carers and as those being cared for) and any policy making needs to be conscious of it.
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spelling nottingham-114142025-02-28T11:13:16Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11414/ Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK Weicht, Bernhard This thesis investigates the meaning of care in our societies. Everyone will be concerned with care in some way at some point in his/her life. In the UK and Austria economic and social developments challenge traditional family arrangements while the need for care for the elderly is increasing. But how do we understand care and which meaning does care have for us, for our relationships, for our identities and for our understanding of society? How do we want to live together, and how do we want to experience the process of ageing? Understanding the construction of care helps to understand aspects of people’s ideals, motives, attitudes, imaginations, aspirations and desires in life. This study bridges the theoretical level of broad moral questions and their application in particular situations. Utilising Critical Discourse Analysis in combination with a sample of newspapers and the organisation of focus groups in each country enable an identification of the ‘moral grammar’ of care, i.e. the discourses in which care is constructed. The result is an everyday morality, referring to the way people understand and make sense of their experiences, histories and emotions about care for elderly people. This moral construction situates care in opposition to an economisation and/or individualisation of society. Care reflects an ambivalent desire of people which can be described as being there for each other. By exploring themes such as relationships, home, community, independence and the commodification of care this thesis demonstrates that, on the one hand, moral assumptions and ideals are underlying the organisation of care and, on the other hand, care itself represents an ideal of being moral. This construction has important consequences for all those involved in caring relationships (as carers and as those being cared for) and any policy making needs to be conscious of it. 2010-03 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11414/1/Weicht.pdf Weicht, Bernhard (2010) Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. care ageing morality discourse ethics of care
spellingShingle care
ageing
morality
discourse
ethics of care
Weicht, Bernhard
Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK
title Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK
title_full Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK
title_fullStr Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK
title_full_unstemmed Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK
title_short Caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in Austria and the UK
title_sort caring as a moral practice: an analysis of the construction of care for elderly people in austria and the uk
topic care
ageing
morality
discourse
ethics of care
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11414/