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Signs of the Great Refusal: The Coming Struggle for a Postwork Society - cover image
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Signs of the Great Refusal: The Coming Struggle for a Postwork Society

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TitleSigns of the Great Refusal
SubtitleThe Coming Struggle for a Postwork Society
ContributorTedd Siegel(author)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.53288/0488.1.00
Landing pagehttps://punctumbooks.com/titles/signs-of-the-great-refusal-the-coming-struggle-for-a-post-work-society/
Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
CopyrightTedd Siegel
Publisherpunctum books
Publication placeEarth, Milky Way
Published on2023-12-07
ISBN978-1-68571-162-7 (Paperback)
978-1-68571-163-4 (PDF)
Long abstractIn recent years, developed countries have seen the rise of discussions concerning "the problem with work today." Since this literature tends to reflect the frustrations of the professional–managerial class (as well as other workers in globalized services industries in the digital age), it is often at a significant distance from the concerns of the organized labor movement and the traditional Left. Much of this literature presents an unacceptable either/or: workers are encouraged either to "lean in," and become better "human capital," or else to develop forms of palliative care for these same neoliberal selves by means of personal projects of self-optimization, recovery, and wellness. In Signs of the Great Refusal, Tedd Siegel challenges the assumptions supporting these highly constrained possibilities, asking instead what it might take to deprivatize and repoliticize work itself under contemporary conditions, in order to make a broad-based politics of refusal potentially viable. Where postwork, antiwork, and degrowth discussions taking place today often describe and promote various "postwork imaginaries" in which the decommodification of labor is only implied, Signs of the Great Refusal is concerned specifically with the "postwork political imaginary." Taking up a question formulated by Peter Fleming, Siegel asks, “Can the impossibility at the heart of contemporary capitalism be politically activated to oppose and escape work-as-we-know-it?”
Print length458 pages
LanguageEnglish (Original)
Dimensions127 x 203 mm | 5" x 8" (Paperback)
LCCN2023951545
THEMA
  • JHBL
  • KCF
BIC
  • JHBL
  • KCF
BISAC
  • BUS038000
  • BUS072000
Keywords
  • politics of refusal
  • post-work imaginary
  • value theory
  • autonomia
  • operaismo
  • counter-publics
  • class recomposition
  • automation
  • neoliberalism
Contributors

Tedd Siegel

(author)

Tedd Siegel is a writer living on the central coast of California. He lives with his husband Matt, and spends more time with dogs and goats than with people. Tedd is the co-founder and co-editor of indarktimes.com, a blog site dedicated to overcoming liberal post-politics, and to developing and disseminating new, anti-capitalist critiques tailored to the post-Fordist, neoliberal digital age. Previously, Tedd worked in the Silicon Valley for twenty years in marketing and program management roles related to enterprise software, semiconductor, and optical telecom. He also served as a senior manager of Silicon Valley partnerships for the University of California, involved with major R&D contracts and initiatives between academia, government agencies, and private companies. Tedd holds an M.A. in philosophy from the New School for Social Research, where he attended the Ph.D. program, focusing on moral and political philosophy. Undertaking a dissertation on the normative and utopian foundations of modernity, he realized that he couldn’t finish the last section on hope, because he didn’t have any. Prior to living in NYC, Tedd spent time as a street activist in San Francisco, participating in ACT-UP and Radical Faerie actions and community events in the 1980s.

Tyrus Miller

(foreword by)