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Victoria Goddard (editor) - Industry and Work in Contemporary Capitalism: Global Models, Local Lives? (CRESC)

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Throughout history and in every geographical location, the rise and fall of industry, which impact the fate of large populations, are tied to the development and cultural entanglement of particular models that are articulated with political power. Models are understood as knowledge devices expert, theoretical, practical and commonsense that are embedded in cultural and social environments and designed through struggles at various scales.

This book results from the collaboration of an interdisciplinary team bringing together specialists in anthropology, geography, sociology, economics, political science, mathematics and engineering around the theme of Models and their Effects on Development Paths. Based on empirical research conducted on the heavy industries, Industry and Work in Contemporary Capitalism addresses how models that inform the organization of work and production and are created by powerful actors may diverge from, overlap with, or contradict the models articulated by less powerful actors on the ground, and how they are connected across material and cultural spaces. Careful observation of industrial work and production as they unfold in and across specific localities and affects peoples livelihoods is complemented by analysis of how models circulate, through which channels of power, which institutional entities, which political connections.

This volume explores an extensive theoretical terrain and a number of empirical cases that show, from different perspectives, how ideas about the economy, about work and industry, materialize in specific practices and interventions that affect peoples livelihoods.

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Industry and Work in Contemporary Capitalism
Throughout history and in every geographical location, the rise and fall of industry, which impact the fate of large populations, are tied to the development and cultural entanglement of particular models that are articulated with political power. Models are understood as knowledge devices expert, theoretical, practical and common-sense that are embedded in cultural and social environments and designed through struggles at various scales.
This book results from the collaboration of an interdisciplinary team bringing together specialists in anthropology, geography, sociology, economics, political science, mathematics and engineering around the theme of Models and their Effects on Development Paths. Based on empirical research conducted on the heavy industries, Industry and Work in Contemporary Capitalism addresses how models that inform the organization of work and production and are created by powerful actors may diverge from, overlap with, or contradict the models articulated by less powerful actors on the ground, and how they are connected across material and cultural spaces. Careful observation of industrial work and production as they unfold in and across specific localities and affect peoples livelihoods is complemented by analysis of how models circulate, through which channels of power, which institutional entities, which political connections.
This volume explores an extensive theoretical terrain and a number of empirical cases that show, from different perspectives, how ideas about the economy, about work and industry, materialize in specific practices and interventions that affect peoples livelihoods.
Victoria Goddard is Professor and National Teaching Fellow at the Anthropology Department of Goldsmiths, University of London. She has carried out research on informal sector work, households and small-scale industry in southern Italy and on gender and politics in Argentina. Her publications focus on informal economies and politics, with an emphasis on gender and work.
Susana Narotzky is Professor of Social Anthropology at the Universitat de Barcelona and Fellow at the Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research, University of Amsterdam. She holds the Fellowship ICREA-Academia awarded by the Generalitat de Catalunya for the period 20102015. Her research has focused on issues of informal economy and the politics of deregulation. Her project Grassroots Economics: Meaning, Project and Practice in the Pursuit of Livelihood (GRECO) was funded by a European Research Council Advanced Grant 2012.
Culture, economy and the social
A new series from CRESC the ESRC Centre for Research on Socio-cultural Change
Editors
Professor Tony Bennett, Social and Cultural Theory, University of Western Sydney; Professor Penny Harvey, Anthropology, Manchester University; Professor Kevin Hetherington, Geography, Open University
Editorial Advisory Board
Andrew Barry, University of Oxford; Michel Callon, Ecole des Mines de Paris; Dipesh Chakrabarty, The University of Chicago; Mike Crang, University of Durham; Tim Dant, Lancaster University; Jean-Louis Fabiani, Ecoles de Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales; Antoine Hennion, Paris Institute of Technology; Eric Hirsch, Brunel University; John Law, The Open University; Randy Martin, New York University; Timothy Mitchell, New York University; Rolland Munro, Keele University; Andrew Pickering, University of Exeter; Mary Poovey, New York University; Hugh Willmott, University of Cardiff; Sharon Zukin, Brooklyn College City University New York/Graduate School, City University of New York
The Culture, Economy and the Social series is committed to innovative contemporary, comparative and historical work on the relations between social, cultural and economic change. It publishes empirically-based research that is theoretically informed, that critically examines the ways in which social, cultural and economic change is framed and made visible, and that is attentive to perspectives that tend to be ignored or side-lined by grand theorising or epochal accounts of social change. The series addresses the diverse manifestations of contemporary capitalism, and considers the various ways in which the social, the cultural and the economic are apprehended as tangible sites of value and practice. It is explicitly comparative, publishing books that work across disciplinary perspectives, cross culturally, or across different historical periods.
The series is actively engaged in the analysis of the different theoretical traditions that have contributed to the development of the cultural turn with a view to clarifying where these approaches converge and where they diverge on a particular issue. It is equally concerned to explore the new critical agendas emerging from current critiques of the cultural turn: those associated with the descriptive turn for example. Our commitment to interdisciplinarity thus aims at enriching theoretical and methodological discussion, building awareness of the common ground that has emerged in the past decade, and thinking through what is at stake in those approaches that resist integration to a common analytical model.
Series titles include:
The Media and Social Theory (2008)
Edited by David Hesmondhalgh and Jason Toynbee
Culture, Class, Distinction (2009)
Tony Bennett, Mike Savage, Elizabeth Bortolaia Silva, Alan Warde, Modesto Gayo-Cal and David Wright
Material Powers (2010)
Edited by Tony Bennett and Patrick Joyce
The Social after Gabriel Tarde
Debates and assessments (2010)
Edited by Matei Candea
Cultural Analysis and Bourdieus Legacy (2010)
Edited by Elizabeth Silva and Alan Ward
Milk, Modernity and the Making of the Human (2010)
Richie Nimmo
Creative Labour
Media work in three cultural industries (2010)
Edited by David Hesmondhalgh and Sarah Baker
Migrating Music (2011)
Edited by Jason Toynbee and Byron Dueck
Sport and the Transformation of Modern Europe
States, media and markets 19502010 (2011)
Edited by Alan Tomlinson, Christopher Young and Richard Holt
Inventive Methods
The happening of the social (2012)
Edited by Celia Lury and Nina Wakeford
Understanding Sport
A socio-cultural analysis (2012)
John Horne, Alan Tomlinson, Garry Whannel and Kath Woodward
Shanghai Expo
An international forum on the future of cities (2012)
Edited by Tim Winter
Diasporas and Diplomacy
Cosmopolitan contact zones at the BBC World Service (19322012)
Edited by Marie Gillespie and Alban Webb (2012)
Making Culture, Changing Society (2013)
Tony Bennett
Interdisciplinarity
Reconfigurations of the social and natural sciences (2013)
Edited by Andrew Barry and Georgina Born
Objects and Materials
A Routledge companion (2013)
Edited by Penny Harvey, Eleanor Conlin Casella, Gillian Evans, Hannah Knox, Christine McLean, Elizabeth B. Silva, Nicholas Thoburn and Kath Woodward
Accumulation
The material politics of plastic (2013)
Edited by Gay Hawkins, Jennifer Gabrys and Mike Michael
Theorizing Cultural Work
Labour, continuity and change in the cultural and creative industries (2013)
Edited by Mark Banks, Rosalind Gill and Stephanie Taylor
Comedy and Distinction
The cultural currency of a good sense of humour (2014)
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