Working the Phones

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Ethnography of Work
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Precarious Labour
Precarious Work
Precarity
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Sociology of Work
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Unionisation
Unionised Workforce
Unions
Work and Labour Studies
Work Ethnography
Worker resistance

Product details

  • ISBN 9780745399065
  • Weight: 262g
  • Dimensions: 135 x 215mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Nov 2016
  • Publisher: Pluto Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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*Shortlisted for the BBC Radio 4 Thinking Allowed Award for Ethnography 2017*

*Winner of the 2016 Labor History Best Book prize*

Over a million people in the UK work in call centres, and the phrase has become synonymous with low-paid and high stress work, dictatorial supervisors and an enforced dearth of union organisation. However, rarely does the public have access to the true picture of what goes on in these institutions.

For Working the Phones, Jamie Woodcock worked undercover in a call centre to gather insights into the everyday experiences of call centre workers. He shows how this work has become emblematic of the shift towards a post-industrial service economy, and all the issues that this produces, such as the destruction of a unionised work force, isolation and alienation, loss of agency and, ominously, the proliferation of surveillance and control which affects mental and physical well being of the workers.

By applying a sophisticated, radical analysis to a thoroughly international 21st century phenomenon, Working the Phones presents a window onto the methods of resistance that are developing on our office floors, and considers whether there is any hope left for the modern worker today.

Jamie Woodcock completed his PhD at Goldsmiths, University of London. He is the author of Working the Phones (Pluto, 2016). He is currently a fellow at LSE. His research interests include: digital labour, technology, management, critical theory, and the sociology of work.

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