Engineering Masculinities: How Higher Education Genders the Water Profession in Peru

被引:10
|
作者
Rap, Edwin [1 ]
Ore, Maria Teresa [2 ]
机构
[1] IHE Delft Inst Water Educ, Delft, Netherlands
[2] PUCP, Lima, Peru
关键词
Gender; engineering masculinities; cultural performance; hazing; rites of passage; initiation rituals; engineering culture; social differences; IRRIGATION MANAGEMENT TRANSFER; CULTURE; MEXICO;
D O I
10.1080/19378629.2017.1342255
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
By telling the story of an agricultural university in Peru, this article shows how a specific professional formation forges a strong linkage between engineering and masculine identities in water management. Although these identities come to be seen as self-evident or even natural, they are the outcome of diverse, repeated, and ritualized performances as part of the everyday life of the university. Through collectively enacting and experiencing such cultural performances, engineering students are trained to do science and technology in specific ways, ways that embody particularly masculine symbolic repertoires. On becoming part of a professional society, through rites of passage such as hazing and field work, students simultaneously learn to behave as engineers and become real' men. Building on and sometimes actively re-working existing societal markers of hierarchy and difference, male engineers in this process distinguish themselves from non-engineers, women and other' men. With careful interviewing and observation of agricultural engineers, the article suggests an interpretive framework to analyse the multiple cultural and performative repertoires that engineer' specific masculinities.
引用
收藏
页码:95 / 119
页数:25
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