Working Construction: Why White Working-class Men Put Themselves--and the Labor Movement--in Harm's Way

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Cornell University Press, 2006 - 235 páginas

Kris Paap worked for nearly three years as a carpenter's apprentice on a variety of jobsites, closely observing her colleagues' habits, expressions, and attitudes. As a woman in an overwhelmingly male--and stereotypically "macho"--profession, Paap uses her experiences to reveal the ways that gender, class, and race interact in the construction industry. She shows how the stereotypes of construction workers and their overt displays of sexism, racism, physical strength, and homophobia are not "just how they are," but rather culturally and structurally mandated enactments of what it means to be a man--and a worker--in America.The significance of these worker performances is particularly clear in relation to occupational safety: when the pressures for demonstrating physical masculinity are combined with a lack of protection from firing, workers are forced to ignore safety procedures in order to prove--whether male or female--that they are "man enough" to do the job. Thus these mandated performances have real, and sometimes deadly, consequences for individuals, the entire working class, and the strength of the union movement.Paap concludes that machismo separates the white male construction workers from their natural political allies, increases their risks on the job, plays to management's interests, lowers their overall social status, and undercuts the effectiveness of their union.

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Contenido

Working Construction
1
The Political and Economic Relations of the Construction Industry
30
The Social Relations of Production
49
A Bitch a Dyke or a Whore How Good Men Justify White and Male Dominance
79
Bodies at Work The Social and Physiological Production of Gender
108
Were Animals And Were Proud Of It Strategic Enactments of White Workingclass Masculinities
131
The Bodily Costs of This Social Wage Occupational Safety in the Construction Industry
158
The Wagesand Costsof White Workingclass Masculinities
179
The Benefit of Being Dumb as Rocksand Other Methodological Topics
191
Notes
207
References
219
Index
227
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Kris Paap is a Senior Research Fellow at the Center for Women and Work at Rutgers University and is on the faculty at the SUNY Institute of Technology in Utica, New York.

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