
A Post-work Movement Is Gaining Popularity Amongst Academics, Artists And Activists, In Reaction To The Many Harms And Injustices Plaguing Current Labour Markets And Work Organisations, And The Looming Disruptions That Automation Is Likely To Cause. This Movement Anticipates And Welcomes The Demise Of Work As A Central Value Of Modern Society. Against This Rejection Of Work's Significance, The Case For Work Argues That Our Situation Is Critical Precisely Because Work Matters, That It Is A Mistake To Advocate A Society Beyond Work On The Basis Of The Current State Of Work. Rather, Because Work Matters, We Should Try To Organise It Differently. The First Part Of The Book Locates The Arguments Feeding Into The Case Against Work In The Long History Of Social And Political Thought. This Genealogical Inquiry Highlights Many Conceptual And Methodological Issues In Classical And Contemporary Accounts. The Second Part Of The Book Makes The Case For Work In A Positive Way, Through A Dialectical Argument. It Shows That The Very Features Of Work That Its Critics Emphasise, Which Make It Akin To A Realm Of Necessity, Can In Fact Become The Conduit For Individual Self-development And Social Solidarity, Provided Work Is Organised In Conditions That Are Fair And Equal
Does the contemporary critique of labor as an inherently oppressive institution overlook the fundamental necessity of work for human flourishing and social cohesion? Jean-Philippe Deranty, a professor of philosophy, examines the intellectual history of anti-work movements and argues that the current dissatisfaction with labor markets should lead to structural reform rather than the abandonment of work as a central societal value. By employing a dialectical framework, the author posits that work possesses the inherent potential to facilitate individual self-development and foster social solidarity when organized under equitable conditions.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in political philosophy recognize this work as a rigorous counter-argument to post-work theory, noting its dense engagement with historical and contemporary social thought. Readers frequently highlight the book's utility for those seeking a philosophical foundation for labor reform rather than a purely economic critique.
Page Count:
432
Publication Date:
2024-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192887149
ISBN-13:
9780192887146
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