The emotional labor of former street children working as tour guides in Delhi

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

In Delhi, former street children guide tourists around the streets they once inhabited and show how the NGOs they live with try to resocialize current street children. The “personal stories” they perform implicitly advocate simple solutions that conveniently fit the limited engagement of the tourists, whose ethical position is thereby validated in relation to the NGO. But this uncomplicated exchange of guides’ emotions for tourists’ capital is in the guides’ interest, because it allows them to set boundaries for the emotional labor of performing their past suffering. The guides are thus incentivized to work within a post-humanitarian logic, selling their stories as commodities, which then incentivize the tourists to act as consumers, who have little choice but to frame their declarations of solidarity with the children as acts of consumption.

Translated title of the contributionTidligere gadebørns følelsesarbejde som turguider i Delhi
Original languageEnglish
JournalFocaal - European Journal for Anthropology
Volume2019
Issue number85
Pages (from-to)97-109
Number of pages13
ISSN0920-1297
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

Keywords

  • Delhi
  • Emotional labor
  • Humanitarianism
  • India
  • Narrative group identity
  • Poverty tourism
  • Slum tourism
  • Street children

Cite this