posted on 2016-04-08, 09:29authored byJason R. A. Hughes, Ruth Simpson, Natasha Slutskaya, Alex Simpson, Kahryn Hughes
Drawing on a relational approach and based on an ethnographic study of street cleaners and refuse collectors, we redress a tendency towards an over-emphasis on the discursive by exploring the co-constitution of the material and symbolic dynamics of dirt. We show how esteem-enhancing strategies that draw on the symbolic can be both supported and undermined by the physicality of dirt, and how relations of power are rooted in subordinating material conditions. Through employing Hardy and Thomas’s (2015) taxonomy of objects, practice, bodies and space, we develop a fuller understanding of how the symbolic and material are fundamentally entwined within dirty work, and suggest that a neglect of the latter might foster a false optimism regarding worker experiences.
History
Citation
Work, Employment and Society, 2017, 31(1), pp. 106-122
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, ARTS AND HUMANITIES/Department of Sociology
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
Work
Publisher
SAGE Publications (UK and US) for British Sociological Association