Manufacturing Consent

Regular price €34.99
A01=Michael Burawoy
academic
analysis
Author_Michael Burawoy
autonomy
capitalism
capitalist
career
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Category=JPFM
Category=JPQB
Category=KCF
Category=KNX
change
corporate
corporation
donald roy
economic
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eq_society-politics
ethnographic
ethnography
explanation
exploitation
factory
finance
ideological
industrial
jobs
labor
marxist
monopoly
philosophical
philosophy
political
politics
postwar
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scholarly
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technology
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wartime
workers
workforce
world war ii
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780226080383
  • Weight: 425g
  • Dimensions: 14 x 22mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Sep 1982
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Since the 1930s, industrial sociologists have tried to answer the question, Why do workers not work harder? Michael Burawoy spent ten months as a machine operator in a Chicago factory trying to answer different but equally important questions: Why do workers work as hard as they do? Why do workers routinely consent to their own exploitation?

Manufacturing Consent, the result of Burawoy's research, combines rich ethnographical description with an original Marxist theory of the capitalist labor process. Manufacturing Consent is unique among studies of this kind because Burawoy has been able to analyze his own experiences in relation to those of Donald Roy, who studied the same factory thirty years earlier. Burawoy traces the technical, political, and ideological changes in factory life to the transformations of the market relations of the plant (it is now part of a multinational corporation) and to broader movements, since World War II, in industrial relations.