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Queer(y)ing construction: exploring sexuality and masculinity in construction

Paul W Chan

In: Proceedings of the twenty-seventh annual ARCOM conference, Bristol. Association of Researchers in Construction Management. 5-7 September 2011: Association of Researchers in Construction Management (ARCOM); 05 Sep 2011-07 Sep 2011; Bristol. 2011. p. 207-216.

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Abstract

The macho image of the construction industry often denotes negative aspects of male dominance and female subordination. These have been used to explain the problem of gender imbalance in construction. Proponents of the diversity agenda have sought to tackle structural characteristics of the industry by embracing perspectives of visible minorities in the industry such as women. Thus, the macho image is usually treated as a problem, and rarely problematised. To better understand what the macho image of the industry really entails, there is a need to divert attention away from gendered perspectives of construction towards understanding sexuality as a means of reproducing social relations at the construction workplace. Through life stories of two homosexual men engaging in construction work, hegemonic masculinity and misogyny are explored. Preliminary analysis suggests the potential for a more inclusive notion of masculinity in construction, and a research agenda to rethink gender categories in construction employment.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Type of conference contribution:
Publication date:
Author(s) list:
Conference title:
Association of Researchers in Construction Management (ARCOM)
Conference venue:
Bristol
Conference start date:
2011-09-05
Conference end date:
2011-09-07
Proceedings start page:
207
Proceedings end page:
216
Proceedings pagination:
207-216
Contribution total pages:
10
Abstract:
The macho image of the construction industry often denotes negative aspects of male dominance and female subordination. These have been used to explain the problem of gender imbalance in construction. Proponents of the diversity agenda have sought to tackle structural characteristics of the industry by embracing perspectives of visible minorities in the industry such as women. Thus, the macho image is usually treated as a problem, and rarely problematised. To better understand what the macho image of the industry really entails, there is a need to divert attention away from gendered perspectives of construction towards understanding sexuality as a means of reproducing social relations at the construction workplace. Through life stories of two homosexual men engaging in construction work, hegemonic masculinity and misogyny are explored. Preliminary analysis suggests the potential for a more inclusive notion of masculinity in construction, and a research agenda to rethink gender categories in construction employment.
Proceedings' volume:
1

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:133283
Created by:
Chan, Paul
Created:
14th October, 2011, 14:50:59
Last modified by:
Chan, Paul
Last modified:
11th March, 2014, 11:56:45

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