Post-Work
In Post-Work, Stanley Aronowitz and Jonathan Cutler have collected essays from a variety of scholars to discuss the dreary future of work. The introduction, The Post-Work Manifesto,, provides the framework for a radical reappraisal of work and suggests an alternative organization of labor. The provocative essays that follow focus on specific issues that are key to our reconceptualization of the notion and practice of work, with coverage of the fight for shorter hours, the relationship between school and work, and the role of welfare, among others.

Armed with an interdisciplinary approach, Post-Work looks beyond the rancorous debates around welfare politics and lays out the real sources of anxiety in the modern workplace. The result is an offering of hope for the future—an alternative path for a cybernation, where the possibility of less work for a better standard of living is possible.
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Post-Work
In Post-Work, Stanley Aronowitz and Jonathan Cutler have collected essays from a variety of scholars to discuss the dreary future of work. The introduction, The Post-Work Manifesto,, provides the framework for a radical reappraisal of work and suggests an alternative organization of labor. The provocative essays that follow focus on specific issues that are key to our reconceptualization of the notion and practice of work, with coverage of the fight for shorter hours, the relationship between school and work, and the role of welfare, among others.

Armed with an interdisciplinary approach, Post-Work looks beyond the rancorous debates around welfare politics and lays out the real sources of anxiety in the modern workplace. The result is an offering of hope for the future—an alternative path for a cybernation, where the possibility of less work for a better standard of living is possible.
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Overview

In Post-Work, Stanley Aronowitz and Jonathan Cutler have collected essays from a variety of scholars to discuss the dreary future of work. The introduction, The Post-Work Manifesto,, provides the framework for a radical reappraisal of work and suggests an alternative organization of labor. The provocative essays that follow focus on specific issues that are key to our reconceptualization of the notion and practice of work, with coverage of the fight for shorter hours, the relationship between school and work, and the role of welfare, among others.

Armed with an interdisciplinary approach, Post-Work looks beyond the rancorous debates around welfare politics and lays out the real sources of anxiety in the modern workplace. The result is an offering of hope for the future—an alternative path for a cybernation, where the possibility of less work for a better standard of living is possible.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780415917834
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 11/06/1997
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Stanley Aronowitz is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Center for Cultural Studies at the City University of New York. He is the co-editor of Technoscience and Cyberculture (Routledge, 1995), and author of Dead Artists, Live Theories and Other Cultural Problems (Routledge, 1993) and The Politics of Identity (Routledge, 1991), among many other books. Jonathan Cutler is a graduate student at CUNY and a member of the Cultural Studies Center Collective.

Table of Contents

Introduction Quitting Time, Jonathan Cutler, Stanley Aronowitz; Chapter 1 The Post-Work Manifesto, Stanley Aronowitz, Dawn Esposito, William DiFazio, Margaret Yard; Chapter 2 Benefitting From Pragmatic Vision, Part I, Lynn Chancer; Chapter 3 A Justification of the Right to Welfare, Michael Lewis; Chapter 4 Why There Is No Movement of the Poor, William DiFazio; Chapter 5 From Chaplin to Dilbert, Joan Greenbaum; Chapter 6 Schooling to Work, Lois Weiner; Chapter 7 The Last Good Job in America, Stanley Aronowitz; Chapter 8 Unthinking Sex, Andrew Parker; Chapter 9 The Writer's Voice, Ellen Willis;
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