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            Signs of the Great Refusal

            The Coming Struggle for a Postwork Society

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            Author(s)
            Siegel, Tedd
            Contributor(s)
            Miller, Tyrus ()
            Collection
            ScholarLed
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            In recent years, developed countries have seen the rise of discussions concerning "the problem with work today." Since this literature tends to reflect the frustrations of the professional–managerial class (as well as other workers in globalized services industries in the digital age), it is often at a significant distance from the concerns of the organized labor movement and the traditional Left. Much of this literature presents an unacceptable either/or: workers are encouraged either to "lean in," and become better "human capital," or else to develop forms of palliative care for these same neoliberal selves by means of personal projects of self-optimization, recovery, and wellness. In Signs of the Great Refusal, Tedd Siegel challenges the assumptions supporting these highly constrained possibilities, asking instead what it might take to deprivatize and repoliticize work itself under contemporary conditions, in order to make a broad-based politics of refusal potentially viable. Where postwork, antiwork, and degrowth discussions taking place today often describe and promote various "postwork imaginaries" in which the decommodification of labor is only implied, Signs of the Great Refusal is concerned specifically with the "postwork political imaginary." Taking up a question formulated by Peter Fleming, Siegel asks, “Can the impossibility at the heart of contemporary capitalism be politically activated to oppose and escape work-as-we-know-it?”
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/187948
            Keywords
            politics of refusal;post-work imaginary;value theory;autonomia;operaismo;counter-publics;class recomposition;automation;neoliberalism
            DOI
            10.53288/0488.1.00
            ISBN
            9781685711627
            Publisher
            punctum books
            Publisher website
            http://punctumbooks.com
            Publication date and place
            Brooklyn, NY, 2023
            Pages
            459
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              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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