[D66] [JD: 119] How to escape the tyranny of work under capitalism
R.O.
juggoto at gmail.com
Mon Jun 21 10:50:29 CEST 2021
huckmag.com
<https://www.huckmag.com/perspectives/how-to-escape-the-tyranny-of-work-under-capitalism/>
How to escape the tyranny of work under capitalism
Posted Thursday 17th June 2021 /
11-14 minutes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In her new book, writer and researcher Amelia Horgan explores the many
problems facing workers today and why fixing them will mean radically
changing the very foundations of society.
Let’s face it: work isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. For a generation
faced with less opportunities, less security and less pay, the many lies
sold to us about work have been shattered. And yet, with so much of our
identities bound up with our jobs – we do, after all, spend a third of
our lives
<https://www.gettysburg.edu/news/stories?id=79db7b34-630c-4f49-ad32-4ab9ea48e72b&pageTitle=1%2F3+of+your+life+is+spent+at+work>
at work – it can be hard to envisage an alternative.
Writer and researcher Amelia Horgan’
<https://twitter.com/AmeliaHorgan?>s new book, /Lost in Work: Escaping
Capitalism/
<https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745340913/lost-in-work/>(Pluto Press),
sets out to debunk work’s fantasy, and to offer a radical new vision of
what society could look like. In the context of Covid-19 – which has led
to staggering levels of unemployment
<https://www.theguardian.com/business/2021/jun/15/uk-unemployment-rate-falls-staff-jobs-covid-restrictions>
and seen workers exposed to vastly different levels of risk – its
release could not feel more timely.
/Huck/spoke to Amelia about coming to the realisation that work does, in
fact, suck, rethinking unemployment, and why unions must be at the heart
of every organisation.
*You started writing /Lost in Work/ before Covid-19. Did the pandemic
shape the outcome of this book? *
I think the conclusions of the book would have been the same before
Covid. But one thing that the pandemic threw into sharp relief is the
relationships of power at work. And I think that, in some ways, it made
the book an easier case to make, because the mythology of work was kind
of punctured. This ‘we are a family’ stuff doesn’t really hold when
people are being made to go into really dangerous working environments.
In terms of my own kind of experience with the book, people often expect
a confession of being an overproductive person or someone who is too
into hustle culture. Even though that’s a very common kind of pathology,
I am completely the opposite. I’m a fundamentally lazy person, so it
didn’t really cause me to reassess my relationship to work. /[Laughs]/
*When did you start to realise that work, as we currently know it, sucks?*
For me, it was in those first jobs as a teenager. I was working for a
catering agency and you’d have to arrive at some horrible o’clock. Once,
we had to go to this person’s house dressed up in morph suits. [We felt
like] there has to be a better way of organising human life than this!
Whereas in the office jobs I’ve had, I’ve been quite lucky, in that I’ve
had the kinds of jobs that are meaningful – so charity or third sector
kind of stuff. But I think there’s still a fantasy of working life where
you go in and you’re wearing the perfect office wear, and it’s all sleek
and stylish, and you do a really good elevator pitch, or a really good
report… I remember finding that my experience of the office was very
different to that.
But it was more those early experiences with service work, where the
naked power relations are often pretty visible [that made me realise
work sucks]. Especially where there’s gender dynamics at play, because
of just how routine sexual harassment is.
*So many jobs, such as hospitality, have become so much harder during
the pandemic, with staff becoming rule-enforcers
<https://www.huckmag.com/perspectives/the-hospitality-workers-losing-out-on-tips-amid-covid/>,
essentially. *
It’s really awful, and something I’ve been thinking about in terms of
returning to face-to-face teaching at university, and how much the
expectation would be that academics have to police students. And, how
awful that is for social relations if you’re bar staff or an Uber driver.
Having to police people, especially if you don’t have very much power,
and especially in that really precarious gig work, where your future
ability to get work depends on your online rating… you just are not
necessarily going to be in a position to say ‘no’. That’s the kind of
the tyranny of the customer ‘always being right’, which is made so much
more powerful by this platform gig work.
*You include quite a surprising stat at the beginning of the book about
a 2017 poll which found that two thirds of people in the UK claim to
like or love their job. Why was that stat important to include? *
I include that stat because I think it’s really important for people who
are critics of work and of capitalism to reckon with. People /do/report
enjoying their work. So what does that mean? There are a few ways you
could approach it.
One, is that people find things enjoyable in their work that aren’t
necessarily really to do with their work: it might be that they get on
with their colleagues, they go to the pub after work, or it might be
that there are elements of a job which they find rewarding.
The other point is that we don’t have many other opportunities for
self-fulfillment, and for developing ourselves, other than work. So much
of our lives is at work: especially now, where people often work across
multiple jobs, or in precarious work, where people are worried about
what job is coming next. So, work time is not just literally the time
you spend at work.
So there’s a question around that: What would people do instead [of
work]? I think it’s important for critics of work under capitalism not
to be prescriptive or moralistic about what people can be doing. But I
think there are all kinds of other ways of being together, other ways of
creating and living together. This kind of stuff is suppressed, or the
possibilities for them are reduced, in contemporary capitalism.
That’s an important element of why it is that people find enjoyment in
work as well, because there’s not necessarily much else to find
enjoyment in.
*How has this sense that you should love your job only made things worse
for workers? *
That element is really important. This idea that we find freedom through
the market and we realise ourselves through the jobs available to us is
common, but it takes on perhaps a particularly pernicious form when it
comes with these jobs that we’re supposed to love.
You can see that this kind of stuff is thrown back in the face of
workers when they’re trying to organise. [It’s the idea that] ‘If you
really cared about this organisation, or this cause you’re working for,
you wouldn’t go on strike’, ‘Do you not care about this?’… Or, if you
love your job, you would stay longer, you would work for free.
It stops you seeing yourself as a worker, and this is something I see in
academia a lot. It’s not limited to that, of course, but it’s very common.
*The conversation around a four-day week is often accompanied by an
argument that it will make workers more productive on the days they do
work. In this sense, do such solutions sometimes miss the point? *
I think one thing that’s important with demanding less working time is
that it has to come without a reduction in wages. It has to be the same
conditions, but less time. A good thing about a four-day week is that
that extra time could also be put to other political use. One of the
things that genuinely really hinders social movements, or the organised
left, is that people have to work so much and don’t always know when
they won’t be working – the stats on the number of people who don’t know
when their next shift will be is really huge.
In her new book, writer and researcher Amelia Horgan explores the many
problems facing today’s underpaid, exhausted and disillusioned workforce
and why fixing them will mean radically changing the very foundations of
society.
We can put that time to good use; it’s not about demanding it so we can
all go to meetings on our extra day off. And a lot of the attacks on our
time are attacks on our freedom to organise as well as our ability to
have leisure. I think framing a four-day week in those terms can be
really helpful, too. Because people have had a four-day week, with bank
holidays, it’s one of those demands that has a concreteness and
tangibility to it.
There is never going to be one quick fix: we need to look into
rebuilding union power, into ownership within society, and into
inequality. It’s actually a long hard slog, but I do think the four-day
week is an important demand.
*How do we square these kinds of ‘less work’ solutions with a more
radical anti-work politics – are these things at odds with each other? *
I think there are different temporalities of struggles. So on the one
hand, we might be asking for higher wages, but on the other hand, we
might eventually abolish the wage. I think it’s entirely possible to be
saying we want a bit less work now, but in the future, we want the
transformation of work or the abolition of work as we know it.
*So many people have lost jobs as a result of Covid-19. Will our
attitude to unemployment change at all as a result? *
It took a lot of ideology to make unemployment appear as an individual
failure, rather than a social problem. What that suggests is that it’s
open to contestation. What Covid-19 has made us able to say is, ‘Look,
the reason people don’t have jobs is not because they need to get off
the sofa or whatever, it’s because the jobs have gone.’
We’ve seen the government trying to talk about unemployment in the face
of the pandemic, about how people are addicted to furlough
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/06/anxiety-plans-cut-furlough-scheme-workers-chancellor-coronavirus-payout>,
or need to be weaned off. But I don’t think it necessarily sticks as
much as it has done in the past. So, I think there’s an openness to what
unemployment means now. But there is still a huge amount of stigma and
shame and these things which are fundamentally social problems framed as
individual failures. These kinds of attitudes run really deep in our
society and challenging them isn’t easy.
*How do you think attitudes need to change towards unions so that
they’re accepted as a fundamental part of any organisation?*
We need to see unions as playing an active role rather than just being a
kind of insurance policy, basically. And I think a lot is changing. The
pandemic has shown that the unions are the ones saying, ‘No, it’s not
safe to go in’.
But there’s still this idea that trade unions act selfishly, that they
do things that will harm the public to benefit their members. The
prevalence of anti-union attitudes is something we really need to fight.
And I think some of that does come down to seeing it as this thing that
workplaces /should/have. The idea that the workers should be
represented, and be able to stand up and fight for their conditions,
should be seen as completely normal.
Changing people’s attitudes takes a long time, because we’re up against
a really pernicious ideology. But it wasn’t that long ago that even
talking about the possibility of things being different made you seem
like someone who was just on another planet. [For example] Austerity was
seen as the necessary choice whereas now, most people, even in the
establishment will say, ‘Okay, that was a political decision we made’
and there is an openness to politics that means we can contest this
stuff more. But we’re still up against it: unions face ideological
attacks, even from within the Labour Party.
So, I think the popularity of this kind of ‘join a union’ meme is
helpful, but we need to go beyond that. It’s not just ‘join a union’,
it’s push it to be more active, push it to be more militant, get more
people involved, including in sectors that have not been as historically
involved.
/Interview has been edited for length and clarity. /
*/Lost in Work/ <https://www.plutobooks.com/9780745340913/lost-in-work/>
is out to pre-order on Pluto Press. *
*Daisy Schofield is /Huck/’s Digital Editor. Follow her on Twitter
<https://twitter.com/daisy_schofield>.*
**Enjoyed this article? Like /Huck/ on **Facebook*
<https://www.facebook.com/HUCKmagazine>* or follow us on **Twitter*
<http://twitter.com/huckmagazine>*.**
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