Produktbild: Retail Worker Politics, Race and Consumption in South Africa

Retail Worker Politics, Race and Consumption in South Africa Shelved in the Service Economy

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

06.06.2018

Abbildungen

XV, 15 illus., 3 illus. in color., farbige Illustrationen, schwarz-weiss Illustrationen

Verlag

Springer

Seitenzahl

282

Maße (L/B/H)

21.6/15.3/2.1 cm

Gewicht

508 g

Auflage

1st ed. 2018

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-3-319-69550-1

Beschreibung

Rezension

“Retail Worker Politics, Race and Consumption in South Africa offers searing insight into the contested world of retail work and labour politics over the past century in South Africa. … Given the book’s ambitious historical scope and research agenda, its contributions are manifold. … As we confront the sobering realities of our present, Kenny’s book leaves us with a key question about the stakes and the political horizons of labour politics forged during previous eras of struggle.” (Jennifer Jihye Chun, Global Labour Journal, Vol. 9 (03), September, 2018)

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

06.06.2018

Abbildungen

XV, 15 illus., 3 illus. in color., farbige Illustrationen, schwarz-weiss Illustrationen

Verlag

Springer

Seitenzahl

282

Maße (L/B/H)

21.6/15.3/2.1 cm

Gewicht

508 g

Auflage

1st ed. 2018

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-3-319-69550-1

Herstelleradresse

Springer-Verlag GmbH
Tiergartenstr. 17
69121 Heidelberg
DE

Email: ProductSafety@springernature.com

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  • Produktbild: Retail Worker Politics, Race and Consumption in South Africa
  • Chapter 1. Introduction: Precarity in Store

    “Two for the Price of One”: The Inadequacies of Instrumentalism

    Servicing South Africa: Retail Spaces as Nation

    Law and the Category of “Employee”

    “Subjects-in-Struggle”: The Political Subjectivity of Retail Workers

    Chapter 2. Servicing a Nation: White Women Shop Assistants and the Fantasy of Belonging

    Retail Capital, the City and White Belonging

    White Women’s Service Labour

    Skill and Status

    Rules and Respectability

    Retail Expansion, Deskilling and Racial Reorganization

    The Necessary “Familiarity” of White Women’s Labour

    Chapter 3. Rupturing Relations: Abasebenzi as Collective Political Subject

    Black Women’s Service Work: Discriminatory Conditions and Racist Relations

    Refusing Erasure, Rupturing the Logic of Relations: Abasebenzi Emerge

    CCAWUSA and Collective Labour Politics

    Chapter 4. Regulating Retail: The Category “Employee” and its Divisions

    Subjects of Employment Law: “Employee” and “Labourer”

    Part-time Employment: From Responsible Motherhood to Monstrous Deprivation

    Casual Employment: Student Labour, Extra Help and Scabs

    Chapter 5. Signifying Belonging: Restructuring and Workplace Relations

    The Hypers: Revolutionizing Modern Retailing, 1975 to the 1990s

    A “Culture of Threat”: Changing Workplace Relations from the late 1990s

    A Disordered Present: The Past “Moral Economy” of the Workplace

    Subjectification of Workers: Outsider, Criminal, Labourer

    Chapter 6. “Tools Down, Everybody out to the Canteen!”: Wildcats and Go-slows, Political Subjects Reconfigured

    “We are Grown-Ups”: Permanent Workers as Adult Decision-makers

    “I must Make a Sale”: Contract Workers as Skilled Men

    “[We] Bring more Money”: Casual Workers as Exploited Labour

    Joint Actions: Race and Rights

    Chapter 7. “To Sit at Home and Do Nothing”: Gender and the Constitutive Meaning of Work

    “Sitting”: Statis as Social Death

    The Praxis of Providing

    Gendered Anxieties: Working for Children, Working for the Future

    Chapter 8. Consuming Politics: Wal-Mart, the New Terrain of Belonging and the Endurance of Abasebenzi

    The Market as Nation

    Labour Broking and Bulk Labour Supply

    The Law and Political Subject Abasebenzi

    Conclusion: Enduring Retail Worker Politics