Alienating Labour
Title | Alienating Labour PDF eBook |
Author | Eszter Bartha |
Publisher | Berghahn Books |
Total Pages | 372 |
Release | 2013-11-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1782380264 |
The Communist Party dictatorships in Hungary and East Germany sought to win over the “masses” with promises of providing for ever-increasing levels of consumption. This policy—successful at the outset—in the long-term proved to be detrimental for the regimes because it shifted working class political consciousness to the right while it effectively excluded leftist alternatives from the public sphere. This book argues that this policy can provide the key to understanding of the collapse of the regimes. It examines the case studies of two large factories, Carl Zeiss Jena (East Germany) and Rába in Győr (Hungary), and demonstrates how the study of the formation of the relationship between the workers’ state and the industrial working class can offer illuminating insights into the important issue of the legitimacy (and its eventual loss) of Communist regimes.
Alienating Labour
Title | Alienating Labour PDF eBook |
Author | Eszter Bartha |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 362 |
Release | 2013 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 9781782380252 |
The Communist Party dictatorships in Hungary and East Germany sought to win over the "masses" with promises of providing for ever-increasing levels of consumption. This policy--successful at the outset--in the long-term proved to be detrimental for the regimes because it shifted working class political consciousness to the right while it effectively excluded leftist alternatives from the public sphere. This book argues that this policy can provide the key to understanding of the collapse of the regimes. It examines the case studies of two large factories, Carl Zeiss Jena (East Germany) and Rába in Győr (Hungary), and demonstrates how the study of the formation of the relationship between the workers' state and the industrial working class can offer illuminating insights into the important issue of the legitimacy (and its eventual loss) of Communist regimes.
Seasonal Associate
Title | Seasonal Associate PDF eBook |
Author | Heike Geissler |
Publisher | MIT Press |
Total Pages | 241 |
Release | 2018-12-04 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 1635900360 |
How the brutalities of working life are transformed into exhaustion, shame, and self-doubt: a writer's account of her experience working in an Amazon fulfillment center. No longer able to live on the proceeds of her freelance writing and translating income, German novelist Heike Geissler takes a seasonal job at Amazon Order Fulfillment in Leipzig. But the job, intended as a stopgap measure, quickly becomes a descent into humiliation, and Geissler soon begins to internalize the dynamics and nature of the post-capitalist labor market and precarious work. Driven to work at Amazon by financial necessity rather than journalistic ambition, Heike Geissler has nonetheless written the first and only literary account of corporate flex-time employment that offers “freedom” to workers who have become an expendable resource. Shifting between the first and the second person, Seasonal Associate is a nuanced expose of the psychic damage that is an essential working condition with mega-corporations. Geissler has written a twenty-first-century account of how the brutalities of working life are transformed into exhaustion, shame, and self-doubt.
Art and Labour
Title | Art and Labour PDF eBook |
Author | Dave Beech |
Publisher | BRILL |
Total Pages | 314 |
Release | 2020-06-22 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 9004321527 |
This book provides a new history of the changing relationship between art, craft and industry focusing and a new political theory of the categories of aesthetic labour, attractive labour, alienated labour, nonalienated labour and unwaged labour.
Alienating Labour
Title | Alienating Labour PDF eBook |
Author | Eszter Bartha |
Publisher | International Studies in Socia |
Total Pages | 0 |
Release | 2023-10-13 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 9781805391241 |
The Communist Party dictatorships in Hungary and East Germany sought to win over the "masses" with promises of providing for ever-increasing levels of consumption. This policy--successful at the outset--in the long-term proved to be detrimental for the regimes because it shifted working class political consciousness to the right while it effectively excluded leftist alternatives from the public sphere. This book argues that this policy can provide the key to understanding of the collapse of the regimes. It examines the case studies of two large factories, Carl Zeiss Jena (East Germany) and Rába in Győr (Hungary), and demonstrates how the study of the formation of the relationship between the workers' state and the industrial working class can offer illuminating insights into the important issue of the legitimacy (and its eventual loss) of Communist regimes.
Marx, Women, and Capitalist Social Reproduction
Title | Marx, Women, and Capitalist Social Reproduction PDF eBook |
Author | Martha E. Giménez |
Publisher | BRILL |
Total Pages | 412 |
Release | 2018-10-08 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 9004291563 |
In Marx, Women and Capitalist Social Reproduction, Martha E. Gimenez advances a theory of social reproduction which, dialectically, views it as determined by production and as a space for the emergence of political struggles and - potentially - critical forms of consciousness.
The Tyranny of Work
Title | The Tyranny of Work PDF eBook |
Author | James W. Rinehart |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 276 |
Release | 2001 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 9780774737166 |