Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect
- The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Theoretical and Methodological Foundations
- Part II Workplace Affect and Individual Worker Outcomes
- Part III Workplace Affect and Interpersonal and Team-Level Processes
- 17 Leadership, Affect, and Emotion in Work Organizations
- 18 Affective Climate in Teams
- 19 Workplace Affect, Conflict, and Negotiation
- 20 Understanding the Role of Affect in Workplace Aggression
- 21 The Service Encounter
- 22 Emotion Work and Emotion Management
- 23 Dynamic Emotional Labor
- Part IV Workplace Affect and Organizational, Social, and Cultural Processes
- Part V Discrete Emotions at Work
- Part VI New Perspectives on Workplace Affect
- Index
- References
22 - Emotion Work and Emotion Management
from Part III - Workplace Affect and Interpersonal and Team-Level Processes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 June 2020
- The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect
- The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Theoretical and Methodological Foundations
- Part II Workplace Affect and Individual Worker Outcomes
- Part III Workplace Affect and Interpersonal and Team-Level Processes
- 17 Leadership, Affect, and Emotion in Work Organizations
- 18 Affective Climate in Teams
- 19 Workplace Affect, Conflict, and Negotiation
- 20 Understanding the Role of Affect in Workplace Aggression
- 21 The Service Encounter
- 22 Emotion Work and Emotion Management
- 23 Dynamic Emotional Labor
- Part IV Workplace Affect and Organizational, Social, and Cultural Processes
- Part V Discrete Emotions at Work
- Part VI New Perspectives on Workplace Affect
- Index
- References
Summary
The concept of emotional labor or emotion work, first introduced by Hochschild (1983), has received enormous attention among researchers in recent decades (e.g. Grandey, 2000; Grandey & Gabriel, 2015; Holman, Martínez-Iñigo, & Totterdell, 2008; Hülsheger & Schewe, 2011; Rafaeli & Sutton, 1987; Zapf, 2002). It refers to emotional job requirements that service employees are exposed to when interacting with customers or clients. Social interaction with customers is one of the core aspects of service work. Here, as in any social interaction, requirements about regulating one’s emotions play a central role. Hochschild (1983), who coined the term “emotional labor” for this requirement, investigated the work of flight attendants and demonstrated that a substantial part of the job involved dealing with passengers and their emotions, and that displaying emotions that were not felt had a negative effect on both the health and the performance of service providers. As this finding was of high theoretical and practical importance, it stimulated research in the field.
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- The Cambridge Handbook of Workplace Affect , pp. 297 - 309Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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