Labor's End: How the Promise of Automation Degraded Work - Brossura

Resnikoff, Jason

 
9780252086298: Labor's End: How the Promise of Automation Degraded Work

Sinossi

Labor's End traces the discourse around automation from its origins in the factory to its wide-ranging implications in political and social life. As Jason Resnikoff shows, the term automation expressed the conviction that industrial progress meant the inevitable abolition of manual labor from industry. But the real substance of the term reflected industry's desire to hide an intensification of human work--and labor's loss of power and protection--behind magnificent machinery and a starry-eyed faith in technological revolution. The rhetorical power of the automation ideology revealed and perpetuated a belief that the idea of freedom was incompatible with the activity of work. From there, political actors ruled out the workplace as a site of politics while some of labor's staunchest allies dismissed sped-up tasks, expanded workloads, and incipient deindustrialization in the name of technological progress.

A forceful intellectual history, Labor's End challenges entrenched assumptions about automation's transformation of the American workplace.

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Informazioni sull?autore

Jason Resnikoff is a lecturer in the Department of History at Columbia University.

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9780252044250: Labor's End: How the Promise of Automation Degraded Work

Edizione in evidenza

ISBN 10:  0252044258 ISBN 13:  9780252044250
Casa editrice: Oxford Univ Pr, 2022
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