posted on 2015-10-21, 10:48authored byN. Slutskaya, R. Simpson, Jason Hughes
Through
an ethnographic study of ‘dirty work’
and drawing on an orientation to gender as
an active
construction,
this article
explore
show gender and class intersect
in
two
occupations
(refuse
collection
and
street cleaning)
.
Our findings demonstrate
how masculinity and class are mutually
constitutive, producing attitudes and practices, strengths and vulnerabilities
which are shaped
by
shifting relations of privilege and power
and are largely specific to this group
.
Class and status
subordination, in the con
text of this study, are resisted
by adherence to traditional forms of
masculinity
,
and by taking advantage of social comparison in order to diffuse the negative
implications of low status group membership.
In addition,
as a form of resistance of devaluation,
men
evoked powerful nostalgic
themes
-
a lament for the loss of jobs and political power
; the
passing of
the time of closer communities and more traditional values
could be read as a
response to
current experiences of vulnerability and devaluation.
History
Citation
Gender, Work and Organization, 2016, 23(2), pp. 165-182
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/Department of Sociology
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