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The safe hand: Gels, water, gloves and the materiality of tactile knowing

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 18:06 authored by Sarah Pink, Jennie Morgan, Andrew Dainty
In this article, the authors demonstrate how an anthropologically informed approach that attends to the material culture of occupational safety and health (OSH) offers new insights for such applied research fields. Research into OSH typically seeks to solve its perennial problem of 'improving' workers' health and safety through scholarship dominated by management disciplines, human factors and ergonomic sciences, and psychological and physiological theories. Here, they focus on the example of 'the safe hand' and its making through the materiality of gels, water and gloves in the work of health care workers. In doing so they show how organizational, environmental, embodied and biographical elements of OSH intersect with institutionalized and personalized constituents of the material and sensory culture of safety amongst health care workers. They argue that material culture studies have a pivotal role in revising the agendas of applied research and intervention.

History

Journal

Journal of Material Culture

Volume

19

Issue

4

Start page

425

End page

442

Total pages

18

Publisher

Sage Publications

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2014

Former Identifier

2006051639

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-04-22

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