2018
DOI: 10.1177/0018726717745605
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Practice makes perfect? Skillful performances in veterinary work

Abstract: Is vetting a craft that must be learned due to the limitations of scientific discipline, or simply a question of practice makes perfect? This question arose from our empirical research on Veterinary surgeons (vets), who we found were often struggling with the divergence between the precise and unambiguous knowledge underlying the training and the unpredictability and imprecision of their everyday practices. These are comparatively underexplored issues insofar as the literature on vets tends to be descriptive a… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…Redmalm, ; Schuurman, ; see also Mik‐Meyer et al, , p. 6). In the ‘making’ of this companionship the agency of others, such as the vet, becomes illusory and thus irrelevant (see Clarke & Knights, ). Based on the in‐depth autoethnographic diary notes of the companionship between Kerttu and her keeper, Suvi, we therefore argue that insights from dog–human companionship can teach us something valuable about care, compassion, mourning, death and responsibility.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Redmalm, ; Schuurman, ; see also Mik‐Meyer et al, , p. 6). In the ‘making’ of this companionship the agency of others, such as the vet, becomes illusory and thus irrelevant (see Clarke & Knights, ). Based on the in‐depth autoethnographic diary notes of the companionship between Kerttu and her keeper, Suvi, we therefore argue that insights from dog–human companionship can teach us something valuable about care, compassion, mourning, death and responsibility.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this relation, also the thoughts and actions of the vets matter. As Clarke and Knights () argue, notions of veterinarian expertise often turn out to be illusory — and so it was also in Kerttu's case as the vets seemed to struggle to find the right answers to her mysterious disease. The two empirical extracts above capture the fine‐grained nuances of caring about the other (Graham, ), thus rendering visible the complex relation between the giver and the receiver of the body work (Wolkowitz, , p. 506) and in which the agency of the animal becomes manifested (see Redmalm, ).…”
Section: A Story Of Female–canine Companionship: Padding Between Griementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A shift to small animal work is only one consequence to arise from going part‐time, another being confidence, already a problem for vets in general (Clarke & Knights, ):
I think going part‐time for females is tough, really tough … you just don’t remember stuff because you’re not doing it as regularly … it drops your confidence, definitely; I feel less confident. (Female, SA Vet)
…”
Section: Findings and Theoretical Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%