Unattainable goals, middle class fantasies: an ethnography of women's work in feminized retail banking in Istanbul, Turkey

Topçu, Berra (2012) Unattainable goals, middle class fantasies: an ethnography of women's work in feminized retail banking in Istanbul, Turkey. [Thesis]

[thumbnail of BerraTopcu_441078.pdf] PDF
BerraTopcu_441078.pdf

Download (908kB)

Abstract

Drawing from a workplace ethnography among women professionals in the increasingly feminized lower echelons of commercial bank branches (so-called retail banking) in Istanbul, Turkey, this thesis is an examination of women’s affective labor and the construction of white-collar subjectivities. Given the performance criteria of professionalism, productivity, efficiency, and individualism as part of neoliberal discourses for attaining the ideal of the white-collar woman in the retail bank, how a woman becomes a “woman” as an outcome of gender and class inequalities outside the workplace is problematically pushed aside. I navigate the various embodied, gendered, and classed affects in terrains of capitalist desire, fantasy, and enjoyment in these affective spaces of feminized employment where women’s affective labor intersects with the immaterial and biopolitical production of fantasmatic white-collar subjectivities. In the end, acting on the middle class work ethic as the formula of social mobility; unattainable sales goals and equally unattainable fantasies of success in retail banking seem to be mobilized through the elusive ideal of the white-collar woman.
Item Type: Thesis
Uncontrolled Keywords: Affective labor. -- White-collar subjectivities. -- Biopolitical production. -- Gender and class. -- Ethnographies of service work. -- Duygulanımsal emek. -- Beyaz yakalı öznellikler. -- Biyopolitik üretim. -- Toplumsal cinsiyet ve sınıf. -- Hizmet sektörü etnografileri.
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HM Sociology
Divisions: Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences > Academic programs > Cultural Studies
Depositing User: IC-Cataloging
Date Deposited: 14 Apr 2015 16:27
Last Modified: 26 Apr 2022 10:04
URI: https://research.sabanciuniv.edu/id/eprint/26846

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item