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@article{ Widerberg2006,
 title = {Embodying Modern Times},
 author = {Widerberg, Karin},
 journal = {Time & Society},
 number = {1},
 pages = {105-120},
 volume = {15},
 year = {2006},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X06061348},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-223235},
 abstract = {We argue that the way time is organized affects bodily habits and emotions. Drawing                on a variety of qualitative and quantitative studies from my large-scale research                project with Ulla-Britt Lilleaas, ‘The Sociality of Tiredness: The                Handling of Tiredness in a Gender, Generation and Class Perspective’                (presented in Lilleaas and Widerberg, 2001), we focus on class and gender aspects of                bodily habits and customs generated in work life and family life (and in the                combination of the two). In this article, I illustrate variations in the type of                time and body habits that different work organizations and professions generate. I                also stress similarities in the use of time and body across professions and gender                to illuminate the driving forces of modernity. It is argued that a                ‘sped-up life’ and a ‘life of doing’ at work                and at home generate a restless body, and irritation (the emotion of late                modernity?) as its emotional expression. Finally, the question is raised whether                this development is not only a threat to the body, but also to the very heart of democracy.},
 keywords = {gender; Gender}}