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INDUSTRY FORGING MASCULINITY: “TOUGH MEN”, HARD LABOUR AND IDENTITY

Andrea Matošević orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-8602-6353 ; Odsjek za Talijanski jezik, Sveučilište Juraj Dobrila u Puli, Pula


Puni tekst: hrvatski pdf 103 Kb

str. 47-47

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Puni tekst: engleski pdf 1.774 Kb

str. 29-47

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Sažetak

In a wide range of virilities, male identities and their modern historical representations that start with a “chivalrous” attitude, as George L. Mosse puts it, one of them is unique – not only because it excludes “classical” physical aesthetics, so important in forming many male identity stereotypes, but also because it exists alongside and “in opposition to” other expressions of masculinity. Hard-working men in a heavy industry milieu – e.g. shipyards, mines, construction or metallurgy, have developed a somewhat different attitude towards unhealthy, difficult and often very poorly paid jobs which created the very core of their masculine identity. That is why it must be seen as part of Gramsci’s propulsive concept of popular culture opposing the
hegemonic culture which, according to the author, is “born inside the factories”; i.e. these “tough” men (and often women e.g. Stakhanovism, Shock work) were the industrial “version” of “progressive folklore”.

Ključne riječi

industry; manliness; hypervirility; work

Hrčak ID:

53537

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/53537

Datum izdavanja:

15.6.2010.

Podaci na drugim jezicima: hrvatski

Posjeta: 4.084 *