In this article, we investigate the relations between discursive practices within the Danish construction
industry and the perceived pain, physical deterioration, and strain affecting the construction
workers. Of central importance is the widely accepted hegemonic discourse on physical strain and
pain as unavoidable conditions in construction work.
Based on 32 semi-structured interviews performed in eight case studies within four different
construction professions, workers? descriptions of physical strain and its relation to the organizational
and social context are analyzed through concepts of subject positioning in discursive practice
and a focus on power relations.
The analysis shows that workers and employers reproduce certain types of traditional working
class masculinities and search for high-pace productive working rhythms, which in combination
with economic incentives common within the industry reproduce physical strain and the
habituation of pain as unquestioned conditions in construction work. The understanding of this
mutual reinforcement of the necessity of physically straining, painful, high-paced construction work
provides fruitful perspectives on the overrepresentation of musculoskeletal deterioration within
construction work and also sheds light on some of the difficulties in addressing and changing
occupational health and safety practices in the construction industry.
Author Biographies
Jeppe Z.N. Ajslev, Centre for Working Life Research, Roskilde University
Ph.D. fellow
Henrik L. Lund, Centre for Working Life Research, Roskilde University
Associate professor
Jeppe L. M?ller, Centre for Working Life Research, Roskilde University
Ph.D. fellow
Roger Persson, Department of Psychology, Division of Work- and Organizational Psychology, Lund University
Associate professor
Lars L. Andersen, National Research Centre for the Work Environment