• Home
  • Archive
  • Categories
    • Adventure
    • Biography
    • Business
    • Children
    • Classics
    • Comedy
    • Drama
    • Fantasy
    • Health
    • Historical
    • History
    • Horror
    • Inspiration
    • Mystery
    • Non-Fiction
    • Paranormal
    • Random
    • Romance
    • Science Fiction
    • Short Stories
    • Society
    • Thriller
    • Young Adult
  • Special Offers
  • Trending
  • Unfiltered
  • Video

Worked Over: How Round-the-Clock Work Is Killing the American Dream – Jamie K McCallum

February 21, 2021
Society

An award-winning sociologist reveals the unexpected link between overwork and inequality.
Most Americans work too long and too hard, while others lack consistency in their hours and schedules. Work hours declined for a century through hard-fought labor-movement victories, but they’ve increased significantly since the seventies. Worked Over traces the varied reasons why our lives became tethered to a new rhythm of work, and describes how we might gain a greater say over our labor time — and build a more just society in the process.

Popular discussions typically focus on overworked professionals. But as Jamie K. McCallum demonstrates, from Amazon warehouses to Rust Belt factories to California’s gig economy, it’s the hours of low-wage workers that are the most volatile and precarious — and the most subject to crises. What’s needed is not individual solutions but collective struggle, and throughout Worked Over McCallum recounts the inspiring stories of those battling today’s capitalism to win back control of their time.

“McCallum may be the only social scientist who has worked as a longshoreman on the Seattle docks and marched in a picket line with the Exotic Dancers Union at the Lusty Lady peep show in San Francisco. Drawing on such colorful experiences as well as deep scholarly research, he makes the compelling argument that Americans are losing control of their work time…. A sobering analysis of quasi-Orwellian tactics that permeate American work life.”

―Kirkus














.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Recently



 


You may also like...
           
  • Home
  • About
  • Add Book
  • Contact
  • Premium Services
  • Privacy
  • Terms of Service

© 2015-2023 BookoftheDay.org All rights reserved.