Available Formats
Work: The Last 1,000 Years
By (Author) Andrea Komlosy
Translated by Jacob Watson
Translated by Loren Balhorn
Verso Books
Verso Books
1st May 2018
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Industrialisation and industrial history
Sociology: work and labour
306.3609
Hardback
272
Width 156mm, Height 235mm, Spine 25mm
539g
By the end of the nineteenth century, the general Western conception of work had been reduced to simply gainful employment. But this limited perspective contrasted sharply with the personal experience of most people in the worldwhether in colonies, developing countries or in the industrializing world. Moreover, from a feminist perspective, reducing work and the production of value to remunerated employment has never been convincing. Andrea Komlosy argues in this important intervention that, when we examine it closely, work changes its meanings according to different historical and regional contexts. Globalizing labour history from the thirteenth to the twenty-first centuries, she sheds light on the complex coexistence of multiple forms of labour (paid/unpaid, free/ unfree, with various forms of legal regulation and social protection and so on) on the local and the world levels. Combining this global approach with a gender perspective opens our eyes to the varieties of work and labour and their combination in households and commodity chains across the planetprocesses that enable capital accumulation not only by extracting surplus value from wage-labour, but also through other forms of value transfer, realized by tapping into households subsistence production, informal occupation and makeshift employment. As the debate about work and its supposed disappearance intensifies, Komlosys book provides a crucial shift in the angle of vision.
Andrea Komlosy has written an important book on the global history of work during the past 800 years ... she thinks about labour on a global scale, thus overcoming a deep Eurocentric bias in much of the labour history as it exists, and she brings feminist conversations on labour into an analysis of virtually all aspects of labour history. Her book is unique, I am not aware of any other such volume. -- Sven Beckert
Andrea Komlosy is professor at the Department for Social and Economic History at the University of Vienna, Austria, where she is coordinator of the Global History and Global Studies programs. She has published on labor, migration, borders and uneven development on a regional, a European and a global scale. In 2014/15 she was a Schumpeter Fellow at the Whetherhead Center for International Relations at Harvard University.