“Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Lucena, Maria do Socorro Roberto de
Data de Publicação: 2023
Tipo de documento: Tese
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPB
Texto Completo: https://repositorio.ufpb.br/jspui/handle/123456789/31526
Resumo: Feminist perspectives that anchor their interpretations under the notions of sexual and racial division of labor, of intersectionality of social relations of sex/gender, ethnicity/race and class, have been ensuring or ensuring that these social and intersecting markers are not forgotten in the reading of the social field or the phenomena arising from it. However, they do not yet appear or are incipient in several branches of knowledge, such as Work Psychology. This scenario is especially worrying when it comes to Brazilian society, a society composed of racism, sexism and classism. In which paid domestic work (TDR) is an exponent of this story. In contemporary times, in the national territory, we are witnessing the diarization of TDR. Thus, the present thesis aimed to analyze the subjectivity-work relationship of female daily domestic workers with dimensions of sex/gender, race and class. To this end, this thesis is organized into five chapters, all in article format. The first article deals with the detailed presentation of the theoretical foundations or theoretical dialogues that supported the definition of the problem and the questions guiding the investigation. The second article brings together information about the situation of women in the context of productive restructuring and the Covid-19 pandemic. To this end, documentary research was carried out. The universe of documents consists of national and international reports, bulletins, scientific articles, among others. The panorama constructed or organized in this article adds elements and continues the theoretical discussions carried out in the previous article. Furthermore, it provides very important notes on macropolitics, the (re)formulations of inequalities that affect women's participation in the world of work and lists some current challenges in the feminist struggle. In order to narrow the discussions in relation to female domestic workers and the Brazilian reality, the third article comprises a systematic review and meta-analysis of national scientific production on the relationship between TDR and gender. The initial electronic search resulted in 1,127 productions and, after applying the inclusion criteria and excluding replicates, 16 productions were selected. With the judges' assessment, 13 articles were considered eligible for scientometric and categorical content analysis. Most of the productions analyzed point out and signal the intersectionality between sex/gender, ethnicity/race and class in the configuration of the TDR's position in the socio-occupational hierarchy, the profile of paid domestic workers and the characteristics of their working conditions and relationships. Furthermore, it was possible to identify gaps or research paths, which are relevant for the design and robustness of the empirical investigation, which make up the present work. Articles four and five refer to qualitative field research with the participation of ten women diarists, and have different analysis objectives. Unstructured interviews and a sociodemographic questionnaire were used as instruments and the hermeneutic-dialectic approach was used as the data analysis method. In both studies, the supporting theoretical references were the Sociology of the Sexual Division of Labor, the Afrocentric paradigm of gender discussions and the Psychodynamics of Work. The objective of the fourth article was to understand the repercussions of sex/gender, race and class in everyday work and the subjective mobilization of female workers. We highlight that suspicion at work, work overload and the frantic pace of carrying out the activity, the threat or occurrence of sexual harassment are some of the situations detected in the daily lives of day laborers and which are engendered in the insignia, relationships and material conditions arising from differentiations/hierarchies of race, sex/gender and class. Furthermore, we identified among day laborers processes of naturalization or assimilation of these differentiations/hierarchizations that have repercussions on their individual and collective conduct, although movements of resistance or inflection were also observed. The objective of the fifth article was to analyze the impacts of the pandemic context on the work activity and mental health of female daily domestic workers, taking into account the intersectionality between sex/gender, race and class at work. The findings reflect the role of sex/gender, race and class inequalities in worsening the working/living conditions of women day laborers and the negative consequences on their health. The pandemic experiences of these workers are marked by extreme subsistence difficulties, new dilemmas or risks and the updating of micro-oppressions in labor relations, which give rise to various discomforts for them, from anxiety to feelings of inferiority. The combination of articles provides elements of intelligibility about the condition of female daily domestic workers and their relationship with the configuration of subjective experiences and the quality of health of research participants. Furthermore, it invites us to reflect critically and inventively on the difficulties or ways of confronting sex/gender, race and class disparities, which substantially permeate the work/life issues of day laborers.
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spelling “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristasPsicologia do trabalhoTrabalho Doméstico Remunerado (TDR)Trabalhadoras domésticasMulheres - DiaristasWork psychologyPaid Work Domestic (PWD)Domestic workersWomen – Daily maidsCNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIAFeminist perspectives that anchor their interpretations under the notions of sexual and racial division of labor, of intersectionality of social relations of sex/gender, ethnicity/race and class, have been ensuring or ensuring that these social and intersecting markers are not forgotten in the reading of the social field or the phenomena arising from it. However, they do not yet appear or are incipient in several branches of knowledge, such as Work Psychology. This scenario is especially worrying when it comes to Brazilian society, a society composed of racism, sexism and classism. In which paid domestic work (TDR) is an exponent of this story. In contemporary times, in the national territory, we are witnessing the diarization of TDR. Thus, the present thesis aimed to analyze the subjectivity-work relationship of female daily domestic workers with dimensions of sex/gender, race and class. To this end, this thesis is organized into five chapters, all in article format. The first article deals with the detailed presentation of the theoretical foundations or theoretical dialogues that supported the definition of the problem and the questions guiding the investigation. The second article brings together information about the situation of women in the context of productive restructuring and the Covid-19 pandemic. To this end, documentary research was carried out. The universe of documents consists of national and international reports, bulletins, scientific articles, among others. The panorama constructed or organized in this article adds elements and continues the theoretical discussions carried out in the previous article. Furthermore, it provides very important notes on macropolitics, the (re)formulations of inequalities that affect women's participation in the world of work and lists some current challenges in the feminist struggle. In order to narrow the discussions in relation to female domestic workers and the Brazilian reality, the third article comprises a systematic review and meta-analysis of national scientific production on the relationship between TDR and gender. The initial electronic search resulted in 1,127 productions and, after applying the inclusion criteria and excluding replicates, 16 productions were selected. With the judges' assessment, 13 articles were considered eligible for scientometric and categorical content analysis. Most of the productions analyzed point out and signal the intersectionality between sex/gender, ethnicity/race and class in the configuration of the TDR's position in the socio-occupational hierarchy, the profile of paid domestic workers and the characteristics of their working conditions and relationships. Furthermore, it was possible to identify gaps or research paths, which are relevant for the design and robustness of the empirical investigation, which make up the present work. Articles four and five refer to qualitative field research with the participation of ten women diarists, and have different analysis objectives. Unstructured interviews and a sociodemographic questionnaire were used as instruments and the hermeneutic-dialectic approach was used as the data analysis method. In both studies, the supporting theoretical references were the Sociology of the Sexual Division of Labor, the Afrocentric paradigm of gender discussions and the Psychodynamics of Work. The objective of the fourth article was to understand the repercussions of sex/gender, race and class in everyday work and the subjective mobilization of female workers. We highlight that suspicion at work, work overload and the frantic pace of carrying out the activity, the threat or occurrence of sexual harassment are some of the situations detected in the daily lives of day laborers and which are engendered in the insignia, relationships and material conditions arising from differentiations/hierarchies of race, sex/gender and class. Furthermore, we identified among day laborers processes of naturalization or assimilation of these differentiations/hierarchizations that have repercussions on their individual and collective conduct, although movements of resistance or inflection were also observed. The objective of the fifth article was to analyze the impacts of the pandemic context on the work activity and mental health of female daily domestic workers, taking into account the intersectionality between sex/gender, race and class at work. The findings reflect the role of sex/gender, race and class inequalities in worsening the working/living conditions of women day laborers and the negative consequences on their health. The pandemic experiences of these workers are marked by extreme subsistence difficulties, new dilemmas or risks and the updating of micro-oppressions in labor relations, which give rise to various discomforts for them, from anxiety to feelings of inferiority. The combination of articles provides elements of intelligibility about the condition of female daily domestic workers and their relationship with the configuration of subjective experiences and the quality of health of research participants. Furthermore, it invites us to reflect critically and inventively on the difficulties or ways of confronting sex/gender, race and class disparities, which substantially permeate the work/life issues of day laborers.Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - CAPESAs perspectivas feministas que ancoram suas interpretações sob as noções de divisão sexual e racial do trabalho, de interseccionalidade das relações sociais de sexo/gênero, etnia/raça e classe, vêm garantindo ou cuidando para que esses marcadores sociais e interseccionados não sejam esquecidos na leitura do campo social ou dos fenômenos decorrentes do mesmo. Contudo, ainda não figuram ou são incipientes em diversos ramos do conhecimento, como é o caso da Psicologia do Trabalho. Tal cenário é especialmente preocupante, quando se trata da sociedade brasileira, uma sociedade compósita pelo racismo, sexismo e classismo. Na qual o trabalho doméstico remunerado (TDR) é expoente dessa história. Na contemporaneidade, em território nacional, assiste-se à diarização do TDR. Assim, a presente tese teve como objetivo analisar a relação subjetividade-trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas com dimensão de sexo/gênero, raça e classe. Para tanto, esta tese está organizada em cinco capítulos, todos em formato de artigos. O primeiro artigo trata da apresentação detalhada dos fundamentos teóricos ou das interlocuções teóricas que embasaram a definição do problema e os questionamentos norteadores da investigação. O segundo artigo reúne informações acerca da situação da(s) mulher(es) em contexto de reestruturação produtiva e pandemia de Covid-19. Com esse fim, foi realizada uma pesquisa documental. O universo de documentos consiste em relatórios, boletins, artigos científicos, entre outros, nacionais e internacionais. O panorama construído ou organizado nesse artigo agrega elementos e dá continuidade às discussões teóricas realizadas no artigo anterior. Além disso, fornece notas importantíssimas sobre a macropolítica, as (re)formulações das desigualdades que atravessam a participação das mulheres no mundo do trabalho e elenca alguns desafios atuais da luta feminista. A fim de estreitar as discussões em relação às mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas e a realidade brasileira, o terceiro artigo compreende uma revisão sistemática e metanálise da produção científica nacional acerca da relação TDR e gênero. A busca eletrônica inicial resultou em 1.127 produções e, após a aplicação dos critérios de inclusão e a exclusão dos replicados, 16 produções foram selecionadas. Com a avaliação dos juízes, 13 artigos foram considerados elegíveis para a análise cientométrica e de conteúdo categorial. A maioria das produções analisadas pontuam e sinalizam a interseccionalidade entre sexo/gênero, etnia/raça e classe na configuração da posição do TDR na hierarquia sócio-ocupacional, do perfil das trabalhadoras domésticas remuneradas e das características de suas condições e relações de trabalho. Além disso, foi possível identificar carecimentos ou caminhos de pesquisas, sendo pertinentes para o delineamento e robustez da investigação empírica, que compõem o presente trabalho. Os artigos quatro e cinco referem-se a pesquisa de campo qualitativa com a participação de dez mulheres diaristas, e têm objetivos de análise diferentes. Entrevistas não-estruturadas e questionário sociodemográfico foram usados como instrumentos e a abordagem hermenêutica-dialética o método de análise dos dados. Em ambos estudos, os referenciais teóricos de apoio foram a Sociologia da Divisão Sexual do Trabalho, o paradigma afrocêntrico das discussões de gênero e a Psicodinâmica do Trabalho. O objetivo do quarto artigo foi compreender as repercussões de sexo/gênero, raça e classe no cotidiano laboral e na mobilização subjetiva das trabalhadoras. Evidenciamos que a suspeição no trabalho ou no trabalhar, a sobrecarga de trabalho e o ritmo frenético de execução da atividade, a ameaça ou ocorrência do assédio sexual são algumas das situações detectadas no cotidiano das diaristas e, que, estão engendradas nas insígnias, relações e condições materiais decorrentes das diferenciações/hierarquizações de raça, sexo/gênero e classe. Ademais, identificamos entre as diaristas processos de naturalização ou de assimilação dessas diferenciações/hierarquizações que repercutem em suas condutas individuais e coletivas, embora também tenham sido observados movimentos de resistência ou inflexão. O objetivo do quinto artigo foi analisar os impactos do contexto pandêmico sobre a atividade laboral e a saúde mental de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas, levando em consideração a interseccionalidade entre sexo/gênero, raça e classe no trabalho. Os achados refletem o papel das desigualdades de sexo/gênero, raça e classe no agravamento das condições de trabalho/vida das mulheres diaristas e as consequências negativas sobre a saúde delas. As vivências pandêmicas dessas trabalhadoras são marcadas por extremas dificuldades de subsistência, novos dilemas ou riscos e a atualização das microopressões nas relações laborais, que suscitam para elas vários mal-estares, desde ansiedade à sentimentos de inferioridade. A combinação dos artigos fornece elementos de inteligibilidade sobre a condição de mulher trabalhadora doméstica diarista e de sua relação com a configuração das vivências subjetivas e a qualidade da saúde das participantes da pesquisa. Além disso, nos convida a refletir de forma crítica e inventiva acerca das dificuldades ou caminhos de enfrentamento das disparidades de sexo/gênero, raça e classe, que permeiam substancialmente as questões de trabalho/de vida das diaristas.Universidade Federal da ParaíbaBrasilPsicologia SocialPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia SocialUFPBSouza, Paulo César Zambroni dehttp://lattes.cnpq.br/3852028491893471Lucena, Maria do Socorro Roberto de2024-08-21T10:35:05Z2024-02-092024-08-21T10:35:05Z2023-09-19info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesishttps://repositorio.ufpb.br/jspui/handle/123456789/31526porAttribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazilhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/br/info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPBinstname:Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB)instacron:UFPB2024-08-22T06:05:40Zoai:repositorio.ufpb.br:123456789/31526Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertaçõeshttps://repositorio.ufpb.br/PUBhttp://tede.biblioteca.ufpb.br:8080/oai/requestdiretoria@ufpb.br|| diretoria@ufpb.bropendoar:2024-08-22T06:05:40Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPB - Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
title “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
spellingShingle “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
Lucena, Maria do Socorro Roberto de
Psicologia do trabalho
Trabalho Doméstico Remunerado (TDR)
Trabalhadoras domésticas
Mulheres - Diaristas
Work psychology
Paid Work Domestic (PWD)
Domestic workers
Women – Daily maids
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
title_short “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
title_full “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
title_fullStr “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
title_full_unstemmed “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
title_sort “Aqueles que a sociedade julga ser de mulher, mas mulher que não estudou”: análise da relação subjetividade e trabalho de mulheres trabalhadoras domésticas diaristas
author Lucena, Maria do Socorro Roberto de
author_facet Lucena, Maria do Socorro Roberto de
author_role author
dc.contributor.none.fl_str_mv Souza, Paulo César Zambroni de
http://lattes.cnpq.br/3852028491893471
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Lucena, Maria do Socorro Roberto de
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Psicologia do trabalho
Trabalho Doméstico Remunerado (TDR)
Trabalhadoras domésticas
Mulheres - Diaristas
Work psychology
Paid Work Domestic (PWD)
Domestic workers
Women – Daily maids
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
topic Psicologia do trabalho
Trabalho Doméstico Remunerado (TDR)
Trabalhadoras domésticas
Mulheres - Diaristas
Work psychology
Paid Work Domestic (PWD)
Domestic workers
Women – Daily maids
CNPQ::CIENCIAS HUMANAS::PSICOLOGIA
description Feminist perspectives that anchor their interpretations under the notions of sexual and racial division of labor, of intersectionality of social relations of sex/gender, ethnicity/race and class, have been ensuring or ensuring that these social and intersecting markers are not forgotten in the reading of the social field or the phenomena arising from it. However, they do not yet appear or are incipient in several branches of knowledge, such as Work Psychology. This scenario is especially worrying when it comes to Brazilian society, a society composed of racism, sexism and classism. In which paid domestic work (TDR) is an exponent of this story. In contemporary times, in the national territory, we are witnessing the diarization of TDR. Thus, the present thesis aimed to analyze the subjectivity-work relationship of female daily domestic workers with dimensions of sex/gender, race and class. To this end, this thesis is organized into five chapters, all in article format. The first article deals with the detailed presentation of the theoretical foundations or theoretical dialogues that supported the definition of the problem and the questions guiding the investigation. The second article brings together information about the situation of women in the context of productive restructuring and the Covid-19 pandemic. To this end, documentary research was carried out. The universe of documents consists of national and international reports, bulletins, scientific articles, among others. The panorama constructed or organized in this article adds elements and continues the theoretical discussions carried out in the previous article. Furthermore, it provides very important notes on macropolitics, the (re)formulations of inequalities that affect women's participation in the world of work and lists some current challenges in the feminist struggle. In order to narrow the discussions in relation to female domestic workers and the Brazilian reality, the third article comprises a systematic review and meta-analysis of national scientific production on the relationship between TDR and gender. The initial electronic search resulted in 1,127 productions and, after applying the inclusion criteria and excluding replicates, 16 productions were selected. With the judges' assessment, 13 articles were considered eligible for scientometric and categorical content analysis. Most of the productions analyzed point out and signal the intersectionality between sex/gender, ethnicity/race and class in the configuration of the TDR's position in the socio-occupational hierarchy, the profile of paid domestic workers and the characteristics of their working conditions and relationships. Furthermore, it was possible to identify gaps or research paths, which are relevant for the design and robustness of the empirical investigation, which make up the present work. Articles four and five refer to qualitative field research with the participation of ten women diarists, and have different analysis objectives. Unstructured interviews and a sociodemographic questionnaire were used as instruments and the hermeneutic-dialectic approach was used as the data analysis method. In both studies, the supporting theoretical references were the Sociology of the Sexual Division of Labor, the Afrocentric paradigm of gender discussions and the Psychodynamics of Work. The objective of the fourth article was to understand the repercussions of sex/gender, race and class in everyday work and the subjective mobilization of female workers. We highlight that suspicion at work, work overload and the frantic pace of carrying out the activity, the threat or occurrence of sexual harassment are some of the situations detected in the daily lives of day laborers and which are engendered in the insignia, relationships and material conditions arising from differentiations/hierarchies of race, sex/gender and class. Furthermore, we identified among day laborers processes of naturalization or assimilation of these differentiations/hierarchizations that have repercussions on their individual and collective conduct, although movements of resistance or inflection were also observed. The objective of the fifth article was to analyze the impacts of the pandemic context on the work activity and mental health of female daily domestic workers, taking into account the intersectionality between sex/gender, race and class at work. The findings reflect the role of sex/gender, race and class inequalities in worsening the working/living conditions of women day laborers and the negative consequences on their health. The pandemic experiences of these workers are marked by extreme subsistence difficulties, new dilemmas or risks and the updating of micro-oppressions in labor relations, which give rise to various discomforts for them, from anxiety to feelings of inferiority. The combination of articles provides elements of intelligibility about the condition of female daily domestic workers and their relationship with the configuration of subjective experiences and the quality of health of research participants. Furthermore, it invites us to reflect critically and inventively on the difficulties or ways of confronting sex/gender, race and class disparities, which substantially permeate the work/life issues of day laborers.
publishDate 2023
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2023-09-19
2024-08-21T10:35:05Z
2024-02-09
2024-08-21T10:35:05Z
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format doctoralThesis
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dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv https://repositorio.ufpb.br/jspui/handle/123456789/31526
url https://repositorio.ufpb.br/jspui/handle/123456789/31526
dc.language.iso.fl_str_mv por
language por
dc.rights.driver.fl_str_mv Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazil
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/br/
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Brazil
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/br/
eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Federal da Paraíba
Brasil
Psicologia Social
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia Social
UFPB
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Universidade Federal da Paraíba
Brasil
Psicologia Social
Programa de Pós-Graduação em Psicologia Social
UFPB
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPB
instname:Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB)
instacron:UFPB
instname_str Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB)
instacron_str UFPB
institution UFPB
reponame_str Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPB
collection Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPB
repository.name.fl_str_mv Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFPB - Universidade Federal da Paraíba (UFPB)
repository.mail.fl_str_mv diretoria@ufpb.br|| diretoria@ufpb.br
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