Abstract:
This thesis explores the meaning of work and its effect on the individual through an
'existential' lens using the 'job-career-calling model' as heuristic. A qualitative study was
conducted consisting of in-depth interviews with fourteen professionals, 40-60 years of
age, who had made a major change in their line of work. The interviews consisted of a
variety of questions designed to elicit feelings about the importance of work using the
job-career-calling model and to explore work in relation to their overall experience of
life. The interviews were then analyzed using an existential framework (choice, bad faith,
authenticity, contingency, death) which was developed from a broad-based review of the
literature. The overall results showed that models such as the job-career-calling model are
limited as they fail to take into account the existential self and promote a discourse of
work as meaning. The results revealed that there are many interrelated factors that affect
how the individual views and chooses work, and in order to understand the meaning
placed on work, these factors must be taken into account. The central conclusion is that
we cannot understand work separate from the existential self; that work must be viewed
in terms of its relationship to the formation of the individual self, and not as a separate
'sphere' of life. A preliminary conception of an existential approach to the meaning of
work is then outlined. The thesis concludes with theoretical and practical implications,
limitations of the research and a future research agenda.