7/20/15

Work doesn't block the doorway it pretends it is the destination.



Waged work remains today the centerpiece of late capitalist economic systems; it is, of course, the way most people acquire access to the necessities of food, clothing, and shelter. It is not only the primary mechanism by which income is distributed, it is also the basic means by which status is allocated, and by which most people gain access to healthcare and retirement. After the family, waged work is often the most important, if not sole, source of sociality for millions. Raising children with attributes that will secure them forms of employment that can match if not surpass the class standing of their parents is the gold standard of parenting. In addition, "making people capable of working is," as Nona Glazer notes, "the central goal of schooling, a criterion of successful medical and psychiatric treatment, and an ostensible goal of most welfare policies and unemployment compensation programs" (1993, 33). Helping to make people "work read" and moving them into jobs are central objectives of social work (Macarov 1980, 12), a common rationale for the prison system, and an important inducement to preform military service. Indeed, enforcing work and the other side of defending property rights, is a key function of the state (Seidman 1991, 315), and a particular preoccupation of the post welfare, neoliberal state.

-- Kathi Weeks "T
he Problem with Work: Feminism, Marxism, Antiwork Politics, and Postwork Imaginaries"


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