Bennett Julia
Department of Social and Political Science, University of Chester, Chester, United Kingdom.
Front Sociol. 2020 Sep 8;5:68. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2020.00068. eCollection 2020.
Taking a biographical approach, this paper uses life history narratives across four generations of families living and working in Wigan, Lancashire to analyse social and cultural changes in working life biographies over the past 80 years. Beginning with those who left school at 14, prior to the 1944 Education Act up to the present, where young people are required to remain in education until 18, the paper examines the decisions people have taken throughout their working lives. Inevitably these are shaped by structural changes, particularly to the industrial landscape. The biographical narratives allow a "bottom up" approach to uncovering changes to life courses over three generations in a northern British former industrial town whilst also exploring the wider relations between self, society and place (conceptualized here as "taskscape") in a post-industrial setting. Key changes over the generations are the increased ability of women to pursue careers in addition to having a family, the decrease in parental influence over career choice, and the loss of a "job for life" and employment opportunities for manual workers.
本文采用传记式研究方法,利用兰开夏郡维冈地区四代家庭的生活史叙述,分析过去80年来工作生活传记中的社会和文化变迁。从1944年《教育法》颁布之前14岁就离开学校的人开始,一直到现在年轻人需要接受教育到18岁,本文审视了人们在整个工作生涯中所做的决定。这些决定不可避免地受到结构变化的影响,尤其是工业格局的变化。这些传记式叙述采用“自下而上”的方法,揭示了英国北部一个前工业城镇三代人生活历程的变化,同时也探讨了后工业环境中自我、社会和场所(这里概念化为“任务景观”)之间更广泛的关系。几代人之间的关键变化包括女性在组建家庭之外追求职业的能力增强、父母对职业选择的影响减弱,以及体力劳动者“终身工作”和就业机会的丧失。