Sociomaterial Will-Work: Aligning Daily Wanting in Dutch Dementia Care

Annelieke Driessen ORCID logo; (2018) Sociomaterial Will-Work: Aligning Daily Wanting in Dutch Dementia Care. In: Krause, Franziska; Boldt, Joachim, (eds.) Care in Healthcare: Reflections on Theory and Practice. Springer International Publishing, Cham, Switzerland, pp. 111-133. ISBN 9783319612904 DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-61291-1
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Legal and philosophical accounts of ‘the will’ seem insufficient when thinking about what residents of nursing homes dementia want, and how situations in which a resident wants something else than his or her care worker should be dealt with. In this chapter, I offer an alternative understanding of the will—namely as ‘done’ in sociomaterial interaction, in which it can be aligned by making it relational. Instead of dismissing ‘daily wanting’ of those living with dementia, my analysis enables thinking about it. Based on an ethnography of daily care situations in physical care provision in Dutch nursing homes for people with dementia, I propose the concept of ‘sociomaterial will-work’ to highlight how daily wanting is worked upon in the context of unfolding sociomaterial interaction. I describe ways in which care workers’ and residents’ attempt to align the other’s wanting with their own as a form of labour and as dependent on sociomaterial relations, namely by (1) sculpting moods and emotions, (2) managing attention and (3) creative negotiation involving time and materialities. I argue that we may learn something about good care from taking a closer look at these practices: in doing sociomaterial will-work care workers strive for a positive way of relating, seeking alternatives to nothing for neglecting the resident or exerting force. Indeed, sociomaterial will-work may sometimes fail, but, as is key to doing good care, even so, it keeps on trying.



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