Climbing Mount Everest: Women, Career and Family in Outdoor Education.
Australian Journal of Outdoor Education 2004, July, 8, 2
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- 12,99 zł
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- 12,99 zł
Publisher Description
Abstract For women outdoor educators, combining an outdoor career with family relationships appears contradictory. Long and/or irregular hours, residentials, and increasing work commitments are, for example, congruent with traditional notions of a career in the outdoors yet they clash with social constructions of women's primary identities as partners, wives and/or mothers. In this paper, I explore how 21 women outdoor educators constructed connections and disconnections between career and family. In doing so, I uncover how they negotiated their career identities and show how contradictions between work and home were exacerbated due to the centrality of the body to their outdoor education careers.
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