Selling the work ethic : from Puritan pulpit to corporate PR
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Selling the work ethic : from Puritan pulpit to corporate PR
Scribe Publications , Zed Books, 2000
- : Scribe Publications
- : Zed Books, hb
- : Zed Books, pb
Available at / 5 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-280) and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: Scribe Publications ISBN 9780908011483
Description
Explores the capitalist culture of work, the respect it gives to the wealthy, and its justification of inequality. In this fascinating social history of the work ethic, the author shows that these values are neither natural nor inevitable. They have in fact been actively promoted by those who benefit most from them.
- Volume
-
: Zed Books, hb ISBN 9781856498845
Description
Work and production have become ends in themselves. Material affluence is accompanied by increasing levels of stress, insecurity, depression, crime, and drug taking. Escalating production and consumption are destroying the environment on which life itself depends. Yet people are so concerned to keep their jobs that they are willing to do what their employers require of them even if they believe it is wrong or environmentally destructive.
The social benefit of having the majority of able-bodied people in a society working hard all week goes unquestioned, particularly by those who work hardest. Few people today can imagine a society that does not revolve around work. How did paid work come to be so central to our lives? Why is it that so many people wouldn't know what to do with themselves or who
they were if they did not have their jobs?
In this major new book, Sharon Beder unearths the origins and the practices of a triumphant culture of work in which the wealthy are respected and inequality is justified. Dr Beder shows that these values are neither natural nor inevitable. They have been actively
promoted -- through religious preaching, corporate propaganda, the education system, and socialisation -- by those who benefit most from them.
Selling The Work Ethic provides an absorbing account and critique of this central aspect of modern capitalist society. Prompted by her conviction that humanity needs to unlearn and change these powerfully held but now pathological values if we are to reverse the declining quality of life in industrial society, Dr Beder illuminates the impasse we are now in.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Part 1: Work, Wealth and Inequity
2. The Virtue of Work and Wealth
3. Work, Status and Success
4. Justifying Wealth
5. Legitimising Inequality
Part 2: Motivating Work - Coercion and Persuasion
6. Increasing Productivity
7. Work and Identity
8. Work Ethic in Crisis?
9. Keeping the Unemployed Down
10. Welfare to Workfare
Part 3: Motivating Work - Conditioning
11. Teaching Work Values
12. Work, Consumption and Status
13. Long Hours and Little Leisure
14. Conclusion
- Volume
-
: Zed Books, pb ISBN 9781856498852
Description
Work and production have become ends in themselves. Material affluence is accompanied by increasing levels of stress, insecurity, depression, crime, and drug taking. Escalating production and consumption are destroying the environment on which life itself depends. Yet people are so concerned to keep their jobs that they are willing to do what their employers require of them even if they believe it is wrong or environmentally destructive.
The social benefit of having the majority of able-bodied people in a society working hard all week goes unquestioned, particularly by those who work hardest. Few people today can imagine a society that does not revolve around work. How did paid work come to be so central to our lives? Why is it that so many people wouldn't know what to do with themselves or who
they were if they did not have their jobs?
In this major new book, Sharon Beder unearths the origins and the practices of a triumphant culture of work in which the wealthy are respected and inequality is justified. Dr Beder shows that these values are neither natural nor inevitable. They have been actively
promoted -- through religious preaching, corporate propaganda, the education system, and socialisation -- by those who benefit most from them.
Selling The Work Ethic provides an absorbing account and critique of this central aspect of modern capitalist society. Prompted by her conviction that humanity needs to unlearn and change these powerfully held but now pathological values if we are to reverse the declining quality of life in industrial society, Dr Beder illuminates the impasse we are now in.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Part 1: Work, Wealth and Inequity
2. The Virtue of Work and Wealth
3. Work, Status and Success
4. Justifying Wealth
5. Legitimising Inequality
Part 2: Motivating Work - Coercion and Persuasion
6. Increasing Productivity
7. Work and Identity
8. Work Ethic in Crisis?
9. Keeping the Unemployed Down
10. Welfare to Workfare
Part 3: Motivating Work - Conditioning
11. Teaching Work Values
12. Work, Consumption and Status
13. Long Hours and Little Leisure
14. Conclusion
by "Nielsen BookData"