Logotipo librería Marcial Pons
How we Struggle

How we Struggle
a political anthropology of labour

  • ISBN: 9780745347516
  • Editorial: Pluto Press
  • Lugar de la edición: London. Reino Unido
  • Encuadernación: Rústica
  • Medidas: 23 cm
  • Nº Pág.: 288
  • Idiomas: Inglés

Papel: Rústica
31,98 €
Stock en librería. Envío en 24/48 horas

Resumen

'A masterful book - a resource that makes anthropology matter' - Andrea Muehlebach, Professor of Anthropology, University of Bremen

When it comes to labour movements, unionised industrial workers on the factory floor have only ever been part of the picture. Across so many different workplaces, sectors of the economy and geographical contexts, the question of how working people struggle in the day-to-day has no single answer.

Here Sian Lazar offers a unique anthropological perspective on labour agency that takes in examples from across the globe, from heavy industry and agriculture, to the service and informal sectors. She asks: how do people strive to improve their lives and working conditions? How are they constrained and enabled in that struggle by the nature of the work they do, and by their own positionality in local histories, cultures and networks?

How We Struggle explores worker action across the spectrum from organised trade unionism to individualised strategies of accommodation, resistance and escape. The book marries a discussion of global political economy and Marxist feminist theories of labour with ethnographic approaches that begin from a perspective of human experience, kinship and radical heterogeneity.

Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Heavy Industry and Post-Fordist Precarities
2. Light Industry: Gender, Migration and Strategies of Resilience
3. Agricultural Labour: Exploitation and Collective Action
4. Affective Labour and the Service Sector: Work as Relations
5. Professional and Managerial Work: Producing Selves and Processes
6. Platform Labour: Digital Management and Fragmented Collectivities
7. Patchwork Living
8. Social Reproduction Labour
Conclusion
Coda: The Covid-19 Pandemic and Labour: Continuities and the Potential for Change
Notes
Bibliography

Resumen

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