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  THE PROBLEM WITH WORK 
 Feminism, Marxism, Antiwork Politics, and Postwork Imaginaries 
 By KATHI WEEKS 
 Duke University Press 
 Copyright © 2011   Duke University Press 
All right reserved.
 ISBN: 978-0-8223-5112-2 
    Chapter One 
  Mapping the Work Ethic    
      Let us, then, be up and doing,
      With a heart for any fate;
      Still achieving, still pursuing,
      Learn to labor and to wait.
      HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW, "A PSALM OF LIFE"
  
      The idea of duty in one's calling prowls about in our lives
      like the ghost of dead religious beliefs.
      MAX WEBER, THE PROTESTANT ETHIC AND THE
      SPIRIT OF CAPITALISM
  
  
  There are two common answers to the question of why we work so long  and so hard. First, and most obvious, we work because we must: while  some of us may have a choice of where to work, in an economy predicated  on waged work, few have the power to determine much about the specific  terms of that employment, and fewer still the choice of whether or not to  work at all. Whereas this first response focuses on necessity, the second  emphasizes our willingness to work. According to this account, we work  because we want to: work provides a variety of satisfactions—in addition  to income, it can be a source of meaning, purpose, structure, social ties,  and recognition. But while both explanations are undoubtedly important,  they are also insufficient. Structural coercion alone cannot explain  the relative dearth of conflict over the hours we are required to work or  the identities we are often expected to invest there; individual consent  cannot account for why work would be so much more appealing than  other parts of life. No doubt our motives for devoting so much time and  energy to work are multiple and shifting, typically involving a complex  blend of coercion and choice, necessity and desire, habit and intention.  But although the structure of the work society may make long hours of  work necessary, we need a fuller accounting of how, why, and to what  effect so many of us come to accept and inhabit this requirement. One of  the forces that manufactures such consent is the official morality—that  complex of shifting claims, ideals, and values—known as the work ethic.  
     This chapter develops a critical analysis of the work ethic in the  United States. Max Weber's account of the Protestant work ethic will  serve as an archeology of the ethic's logics and functions that will guide  our brief explorations of two later—and comparably ideal typical—versions  of the ethic: an industrial work ethic that dominated US society  through the culmination of the Fordist period in the years following the  Second World War, and a postindustrial work ethic that has accompanied  the transition to post-Fordism. The analysis seeks to recognize  the power of the work ethic and to identify some of its weaknesses—that  is, the chapter's goal is to attend at once to the coherence and the contradictions  of the ethic's elements in a way that can account for both its  historical durability and its perennial instabilities. As we will see, the  elements that make the discourse of the work ethic so forceful and  tenacious also render it always productive of antagonism. The work ethic  has proved to be a trap, but it is also sometimes a weapon for those who  are subject to its strictures.  
     I want to advance three general claims in this chapter: first, we cannot  take on the structures of work without also challenging the ethics on  which their legitimacy depends; second, despite its longevity, the ethical  discourse of work is nonetheless vulnerable to such a challenge; and  third, a claim that I will make more explicitly toward the end of the  chapter, because of its particular significance to post-Taylorist labor processes,  our "insubordination to the work ethic" (Berardi 1980, 169) is  now more potentially subversive than ever before. In short, I want to  argue that confronting the dominant ethic of work is necessary, possible,  and timely.  
  
  THE PRIMITIVE CONSTRUCTION OF SUBJECTIVITIES  
  Weber's The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism remains a touchstone  for studies of the work ethic, including this one, for good reason.  As an unintended consequence of the Reformation, the Protestant work  ethic, as Weber tells the story, bestowed on work a new and powerful  endorsement. This new ethic entailed an important shift in expectations  about what work is or should be, and a distinctive conception of what it  means to be a worker. What characterized the Protestant ethos in particular  was the ethical sanction for and the psychological impetus to  work; ascetic Protestantism preached the moral import of constant and  methodical productive effort on the part of self-disciplined individual  subjects. This was no mere practical advice: "The infraction of its rules  is treated not as foolishness," Weber maintains, "but as forgetfulness  of duty" (1958, 51). One should set oneself to a lifetime of "organized  worldly labour" (83) as if (and not, as we will see, precisely because) one  were called to it by God. Weber's brilliant study of how and to what effect  we came to be haunted by the legacy of this Puritan ethic introduces the  essential components, fundamental dynamics, and key purposes of the  new ethic of work that developed in conjunction with capitalism in  Western Europe and North America.  
     Weber offers an archeology of capitalist development that is in many  ways comparable to the one Marx proposed in the brief account of  primitive accumulation toward the end of the first volume of Capital.  There Marx countered the political economists' morality tale about two  kinds of people, the industrious and the lazy, with a very different kind of  origins story, this one about the violent usurpation by a few of the  common property of all (1976, 873–76). In equally polemical fashion,  Weber takes on his own enemy, the structural teleologies of the economic  determinists, and presents a sharply contrasting analysis that emphasizes  the unpredictable emergence and historical force of ideas. Marx  and Weber each offer an account of how two classes, the proletariat and  the bourgeoisie, came to be; but where Marx focuses on their relations to  the means of production as propertied owners and propertyless workers,  Weber concentrates on the development of their consciousnesses as employers  and employees. Weber explains the ideas that gave the political  economists' parable about the ethically deserving and undeserving its  authority and insists that this story must be understood as more than an  ideological cover for the use of force; it was itself part of the arsenal of  historical change in Europe and North America, and part of the foundation  upon which capitalism was built. Indeed, the two analyses mirror  one another, with the role of consent and coercion reversed: in one, the  proletariat must first be forced into the wage relation before its consent  can be manufactured; in the other, consent to work must be won before  necessity can play its role in inducing compliance. The private ownership  of property may be fundamental to capitalist exploitation, but that does  not in itself guarantee the participation of exploitable subjects. Thus to  Marx's account of the primitive accumulation of private property, Weber  adds a story about the primitive construction of capitalist subjectivities.  
     One could pose Weber's project—as indeed many have—as a historical  idealist alternative to Marx's historical materialism, an analysis centered  on cultural forces to counter Marx's privileging of economic production.  And certainly Weber's insistence on the role of ideas in history  is sometimes cast in terms that match Marx's occasionally polemical  claims about the primacy of material forces. But both Weber and Marx  recognize that, formulated as a dichotomous pair, neither materialism  nor idealism is adequate; they may at times serve some rhetorical or  heuristic purpose, but they should not be treated as viable methodologies.  Weber is clear that neither a "one-sided materialistic" nor "an  equally one-sided spiritualistic causal interpretation" will do; thus in the  final paragraph of The Protestant Ethic, he reminds us that the cultural  explanation of economic developments that he has so vigorously defended  is insufficient without an economic explanation of cultural developments  (1958, 183). For his part, Marx affirms that production involves  the fabrication not just of material goods, but also of relationships,  subjectivities, and ideas; cultural forces and forms of consciousness are  inseparable from, and thus crucial to, whatever we might delimit as a  mode of production. "Production thus not only creates an object for the  subject," Marx observes, "but also a subject for the object" (1973, 92).  Although each thinker may have tarried with a different line of emphasis,  neither denies that understanding and confronting the contemporary  work society requires attention to both its structures and its  subjectivities.  
     Finally, just as Marx's account of primitive accumulation in Capital  stands out as a brief historical exploration of a phenomenon he was  otherwise dedicated to explaining in terms of its current logics, Weber's  Protestant Ethic can also be profitably read, rather against the grain of  traditional interpretations, as more a critical study of the present and its  possible futures than a historiographical narrative of beginnings and  ends, or a sociological analysis of causes and effects. In keeping with this  line of interpretation, I will treat Weber's famous argument about the  historical relationship between capitalist development and religious belief  less as a strictly historical claim than as a genealogical device. Indeed,  what I find most compelling about Weber's presentation is not the argument  about the religious origins of capitalist economic institutions, but  the way that putting the analysis in a religious frame enables Weber to  capture and effectively convey both the specificity and the peculiarity of  this orientation to work. The discussion that follows will thus focus  more on the rhetorical force of the causal argument than on the details  of its empirical adequacy. As we will see, posing the historical claim  about the unholy melding of religion and capitalism in terms of a neat  causal argument—with its sharp and definitive contrasts between a "before"  to the Protestant work ethic that Weber casts as "traditionalism"  and an "after" that he assumes to be secular—serves to highlight, clarify,  and dramatize this capitalist ethos, to train our attention on and school  our responses to the phenomenon. Each of these transitions—first from  the traditionalist to the Protestant orientation to work, and then from  that religiously informed ethos to a secular one—offers an opportunity  to defamiliarize what was already in Weber's day, and certainly is today,  an all too familiar formulation of the nature and value of work.  
     Though cast as an elegantly simple and straightforward causal argument,  Weber's account nonetheless manages to convey many of the complexities  of this animating ethos of capitalist development. The Protestant  work ethic is not a single doctrine so much as it is a set of ideas, a  mixture or composite of elements that sometimes work in conjunction  and other times in contradiction. Indeed, it is by Weber's reckoning a  highly paradoxical phenomenon, at once powerfully effective and spectacularly  self-destructive. The paradoxical character is nowhere more  evident than in Weber's claim that this Puritan brand of productivism  unwittingly sowed the seeds of its own destruction: the rationalization it  helped to fuel eventually undercut the religious basis of the Protestant  ethic. While the ascetic ethos of work lives on in the spirit of capitalism,  as the "ghost of dead religious beliefs" (Weber 1958, 182) its existence  and effects are now far more mysterious, a haunting that is at once  palpably present and strangely elusive. Weber's analysis is attentive to  several points of instability on which my reflections on the ethic's later  manifestations will build. As we trace its later iterations under the Fordist  and post-Fordist periods of US history, we see that some of its elements  remain constant while others shift. Indeed, the history of the work  ethic in the United States—from the Protestant to the industrial and then  to the postindustrial work ethic—reveals the precariousness of what is at  the same time a remarkably tenacious set of ideas, dispositions, and  commitments. What makes this normative discourse of work so adaptable  also renders it constantly susceptible to contestation and change.  
     The exploration of the work ethic that follows identifies in Weber's  original argument a set of antinomies that continue to animate the work  ethic in the United States over the later course of its history, through the  industrial and postindustrial periods. Three of these antinomies stem  from the content of the ethic's prescriptions as it mandates at once the  most rational and irrational of behaviors, promotes simultaneously productivist  and consumerist values, and advances both individual independence  and social dependence. Two more emerge as we consider the history  of struggles over the ethic and its application: how it has served as an  instrument of subordination but also as a tool of insubordination, and  functioned as a mechanism of both exclusion and inclusion. These five  pairs are conceived as antinomies rather than contradictions to highlight  the effectivity of their internal conflicts without presuming their dialectical  resolution and teleological trajectory. Whether such dynamics will  produce disciplinary devices or weapons of the weak, and whether they  will generate a progressive historical development, let alone sow the  seeds of their own destruction, remain open questions.  
  
  DEFAMILIARIZING THE WORK ETHIC  
  At the heart of the Protestant work ethic is the command to approach  one's work as if it were a calling. It is here that we find the first and, perhaps  for Weber, most remarkable of the discourse's constitutive antinomies:  the unlikely confluence of the rational and the irrational. Arguably  the most important message that Weber manages to convey—the  central finding and dominant theme of his analysis—is that the work  ethic is irrational at its origins and to its core, and yet it is prescriptive of  what is taken to be the most rational forms of practical economic conduct.  Indeed, this religious doctrine played no small part in the rationalization  that is for Weber so distinctive of Western modernity. It is this  doubling with which Weber seems so preoccupied. "We are here," he  insists, "particularly interested in the origin of precisely the irrational  element which lies in this, as in every conception of a calling" (1958, 78).  Key to this "irrational element" is, as we will see, the noninstrumental  qualities that Weber discerns in what we commonly take to be the most  instrumental of endeavors: disciplined, productive work.  
     This irrationality of our commitment to work as if it were a calling is,  however, also the element of this new cultural orientation to work that  Weber may have struggled most to bring into focus. This "peculiar idea"  of one's duty in a calling, "so familiar to us to-day, but in reality so little a  matter of course" (54), has settled into the cultural fabric, making it  difficult to grasp on its own terms. The value of work, along with its  centrality to our lives, is one of the most stubbornly naturalized and  apparently self-evident elements of modern and late, or postmodern,  capitalist societies. To examine its social and historical specificity and  understand its impact on our lives, this most familiar of doctrines must  first be rendered strange. Indeed, given the normalization of these work  values, perhaps the most important task and lasting achievement of  Weber's analysis is the powerful estrangement from the reified common  sense about work that it manages to produce. In this case, the periodizing  frame and story of the ethic's religious origins serve Weber well; the  alternative historical perspectives they identify provide the reader with  the possibility of critical distance. In fact, the ethic is defamiliarized from  two directions: first by considering it from the perspective of the "traditionalist"  orientation to work that it supplanted, and second from the  perspective of the secularized world from which the reader can then look  back.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from THE PROBLEM WITH WORK by KATHI WEEKS  Copyright © 2011   by Duke University Press.   Excerpted by permission of Duke University Press. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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