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The Overworked Consumer: Self-Checkouts, Supermarkets, and the Do-It-Yourself Economy

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Overworked Consumer: Self-Checkouts, Supermarkets, and the Do-It-Yourself Economy

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781498543804

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

5th October 2020

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Labour / income economics
Central / national / federal government policies
Political economy
Cultural studies: food and society

Dewey:

658.8342

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

206

Dimensions:

Width 155mm, Height 218mm, Spine 11mm

Weight:

277g

Description

The Overworked Consumer examines how the growing use of self-service technology in the U.S. economy has contributed to Americans feelings of busyness and overwork by asking them to perform a variety of tasks in work-like settings for free. Focusing on the adoption of self-checkout lanes in the retail food industry, the book describes how self-service technology is changing the meaning of service in an economy where the boundaries between work and leisure are becoming increasingly blurred. Are big businesses simply being cheap and lazy, preferring to automate and outsource work to unpaid consumers instead of raising wages, or is self-service and its do-it-yourself ethos a response to consumers demands for faster, easier ways of buying goods and services And what exactly are shoppers getting when they go through the self-checkout lane Is it really faster than the cashier lane or just another illusory speed-up meant to distract them from the realization that they are performing unpaid work, unwitting participants in a new retail experiment whose roots can be traced back to the very invention of the modern supermarket And what about the effect on jobs; is this the end of the checkout line for cashiers and similar forms of work, or are such anxieties over automation overstated To answer these questions, the author takes readers inside SuperFood, a regional supermarket chain, drawing upon extensive interviews with managers, staff, and customers as well as an array of examples, retail studies, and statistics to separate fact from fiction and figure out what is actually happening in stores. Concluding with a cautionary tale of two grocers, the author suggests the future of retailing is still undetermined, meaning shoppers still have time to decide whether or not they really want to do-it-yourself. Caveat emptor.

Reviews

In the Overworked Consumer Chris Andrews deploys a number of cutting-edge concepts and theories to frame and inform an interesting and well-written case study of the supermarket, its workers, and those who consume in it. He focuses on a new frontier of consumption in which consumers are overworkedand unpaidand, as the producers of their own consumption, transformed into prosumers.' Andrews ably explores many of the implications of this rapidly changing new world that encompasses and more seamlessly integrates work and consumption. -- George Ritzer, University of Maryland

Author Bio

Christopher K. Andrews is assistant professor of sociology at Drew University.

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