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‘Don’t use “the weak word”’: Women brewers, identities and gendered territories of embodied work

Version 4 2024-03-12, 16:36
Version 3 2023-10-29, 12:59
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 16:36 authored by Agnieszka RydzikAgnieszka Rydzik, Victoria EllisVictoria Ellis

Focusing on an unresearched group of women brewers, and drawing conceptually on embodiment and identity work, this article explores worker corporealities within the gendered landscape of microbreweries and deepens understanding of the body/work/gender nexus in the context of brewer’s work. In doing so, it challenges the marginalisation of female worker bodies in scholarly work on male-dominated occupations. Drawing on interview and observation data collected in the UK in 2015, verbal narratives of women brewers’ experiences of their working lives are utilised to provide insights into how their gendered bodily practices constitute resources for constructing a distinctive ‘brewster’ identity. Women brewers engage in identity work, on both individual and collective levels, through the material and symbolic framing of their embodied and gendered working selves; navigating their physical working environments; downplaying gender to emphasise physical competence; and foregrounding gender in relation to non-physical aspects to accentuate difference and collective contribution.

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Work, Employment and Society

Volume

33

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

483-499

Publisher

SAGE publication

ISSN

0950-0170

eISSN

1469-8722

Date Submitted

2018-06-29

Date Accepted

2018-06-19

Date of First Publication

2018-08-21

Date of Final Publication

2019-06-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2018-06-29

ePrints ID

32537

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