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Discourse & Communication
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The construction of the older worker: privilege, paradox and policy

Susan Ainsworth

University of Sydney, s.ainsworth{at}econ.usyd.edu.au

Cynthia Hardy

University of Melbourne, chardy{at}unimelb.edu.au

Our study of a public inquiry shows how particular constructions of the older worker — as male and lacking in self-esteem — were privileged as a result of discursive manoeuvres that established comparative disadvantage among different identities. Paradoxically, traditional gender stereotypes were subverted to construct female willingness to accept low status, low paid jobs as a reason why they did not need help in the form of policy initiatives; while men's intransigence meant they deserved greater support. A second paradox concerned the construction of the older worker as lacking self-esteem: it led to self-esteem based solutions that were the responsibility of the individual to remedy but, precisely because older male workers lacked self-esteem, they were unable to help themselves and needed the help of employment and welfare agencies. Thus we can see the link between particular identity constructions, discourse and the reproduction of particular institutional structures.

Key Words: critical discourse analysis • identity • older worker • unemployed

Discourse & Communication, Vol. 1, No. 3, 267-285 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1750481307079205


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