Literature DB >> 17610621

Class in construction: London building workers, dirty work and physical cultures.

Darren Thiel1.   

Abstract

Descriptions of manual employment tend to ignore its diversity and overstate the homogenizing effects of technology and industrialization. Based on ethnographic research on a London construction site, building work was found to be shaped by the forms of a pre-industrial work pattern characterized by task autonomy and freedom from managerial control. The builders' identities were largely free from personal identification as working class, and collective identification was fractured by trade status, and ethnic and gender divisions. Yet the shadow of a class-based discursive symbolism, which centered partly on the division of minds/bodies, mental/manual, and clean/dirty work, framed their accounts, identities and cultures. The builders displayed what is frequently termed working-class culture, and it was highly masculine. This physical and bodily-centered culture shielded them from the possible stigmatization of class and provided them with a source of localized capital. 'Physical capital' in conjunction with social capital (the builders' networks of friends and family) had largely guided their position in the stratification system, and values associated with these forms of capital were paramount to their public cultures. This cultural emphasis offered a continuing functionality in the builders' lives, not having broken free from tradition or becoming an object of reflexive choice.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17610621     DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-4446.2007.00149.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Sociol        ISSN: 0007-1315


  3 in total

1.  Danger zone: Men, masculinity and occupational health and safety in high risk occupations.

Authors:  Mary Stergiou-Kita; Elizabeth Mansfield; Randy Bezo; Angela Colantonio; Enzo Garritano; Marc Lafrance; John Lewko; Steve Mantis; Joel Moody; Nicole Power; Nancy Theberge; Eleanor Westwood; Krista Travers
Journal:  Saf Sci       Date:  2015-12-01       Impact factor: 4.877

2.  Filtering Touch: An Ethnography of Dirt, Danger, and Industrial Robots.

Authors:  Ned Barker; Carey Jewitt
Journal:  J Contemp Ethnogr       Date:  2021-06-28

3.  'It Isn't Charity because We've Paid into it': Social Citizenship and the Moral Economy of Welfare Recipients in the Wake of 2012 UK Welfare Reform Act.

Authors:  Darren Thiel
Journal:  Qual Sociol       Date:  2022-02-10
  3 in total

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