2019
DOI: 10.1111/1468-4446.12703
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Dirty work: cultural iconography and working‐class pride in industrial apprenticeships

Abstract: In the seemingly routine and the everyday, lie layers of cultural and social symbolism. So it is with dirt. This article examines the social and cultural roles of dirt within socialization practices in working‐class industrial and ex‐industrial communities. Drawn from oral history accounts with 46 former and current engineering apprentices, the discussion demonstrates dirt as a concept and a practicality, and how the idea of ‘getting dirty’ provided a cultural imagery used to renegotiate moral boundaries that … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Clark and Gibbs (2020) and Pleasant (2019) suggest that the industrial work offered parallel biographies; sons would follow in their father’s footsteps and obtain a perceived job for life. Although many working-class people nostalgically recall industrialism’s working conditions (High, 2003; Taylor, 2020), many post-industrial locales’ employment pathways are now non-unionized and uncertain.…”
Section: Deindustrializationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Clark and Gibbs (2020) and Pleasant (2019) suggest that the industrial work offered parallel biographies; sons would follow in their father’s footsteps and obtain a perceived job for life. Although many working-class people nostalgically recall industrialism’s working conditions (High, 2003; Taylor, 2020), many post-industrial locales’ employment pathways are now non-unionized and uncertain.…”
Section: Deindustrializationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such stability meant worries about not being able to pay the bills were dispensed from steelworkers’ and their families’ psyche. Nonetheless, steelworkers worked long hours, and it was physically demanding; workers had to be both tough and committed (Linkon, 2013; Pleasant, 2019). Although it was laborious, adequate trade union representation awarded industrial workers sizable holidays and in-work benefits (Warren, 2018).…”
Section: The Seaside and The Steelworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Such culture was operationalised in different ways, either as a distinct way of cultural preferences and attitudes in social and family life, home, and food preferences (Deeming, 2014), or as mundane elements of everyday culture such as solidarity, trust, and equality transmitted from mines or factories to everyday life (Ivinson, 2014). The transmission of working-class cultural codes is intergenerational; they are passed on within the family, educational institutions, or work (Pleasant, 2019;Simpson & Simmons, 2019). Byrne (2002) made two significant distinctions from other research.…”
Section: Working-class Culture: Social Class and Cultural Capital Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Few studies (if any) have focused on female vocational students on the industrial programme and their preparation through workplace-based learning to enter a male vocational domain such as industrial manufacturing companies. Vocational education that relies largely on students' workplace-based learning such as the industrial programme also reflects the overall gender order found within the industrial sector and the labour market (Pleasant, 2019). Therefore, it is also important to consider gender issues in general when studying vocational education, because the vocation in itself can be gendered which affects the conditions for entering a specific vocation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%