5/5.
I guess the title is a little misleading, this is NOT one of those inspiring self-improvement books you usually find at airport bookstores on how you should work less to feel better. lol
(Side note: If the aim of a book is to make you become a better person or feel better, it's rubbish and a royal waste of time. This applies in 100 per cent of all cases, no exception. There's no such thing as an individual!)
So this book is still, broadly speaking, a Marxist analysis and critique of 'work' in late capitalism. It's an original contribution to the amazing body of work on gender and race in (post-Fordist) capitalism. So the concepts of exploitation and alienation remain key.
Otherwise, it wouldn't have landed on my desk (technically in bed, as I only read in bed) ☭
Some take-aways:
1. I do have a crush on Sarah Jaffe.
2. The premise: as those of familiar with theories of late capitalism may know, ever since 'we' shipped off the shitty jobs to the - pardon me - third world, ‘we’ have been commanded to 'love work'. Service with a smile, devoted to the cause, working ourselves to death because it is 'sooo much more than just a job'. It's a family, a passion, a mission. You name it. “Capitalism must control our affections, our sexuality, our bodies in order to keep us separated from one another. The greatest trick it has been able to pull is to convince us that work is our greatest love”.
3. And if you are depressed, anxious, lonely and burned out, it's clearly your fault for not having found the work of your life or loving your work hard enough (hint: It's not you, it's capitalism).
4. (Obviously, there is also a need to look at those places to where the shitty jobs have been shipped off to, the sweatshops, Chinese factories, African industrial farms etc. while increasingly services are also being outsourced and relocated. Late capitalism doesn’t mean that shitty jobs have disappeared or have been automated, they have only disappeared from one part of the global to another. There are plenty of excellent books on this too.)
5. Now, this myth of 'labour of love' is the central work ethic in late capitalism (like there is a dominant work ethic for every stage of capitalism). And this ethic of ‘labour of love’ is what this book aims to dismantle for what it is: a neoliberal technique of exploitation. Obviously, this is not an entirely new discovery, especially not for those among us who have spent the past two decades obsessing over neoliberal techniques of power rather than starting grown-up lives 😊 but it does add a very original lens and deep dive from various sectors of the labour of love in the post global financial crisis period of ‘punitive neoliberalism’.
6. Speaking of originality. I absolutely love this style of ‘activist academic reporting’, what an intricate fabric of solid Marxist political economy and historical analysis, reporting, reflections from working people, and a call for action. I am the very last nerd to say that there’s not a place and time for very dry Marxist theories and abstract ‘academic’ debates but bringing it back to the real world and making this accessible without compromising on the political philosophy that underpins the theoretical framework like Sarah Jaffe is just perfection ❤
7. The book starts off with an excellent introduction, with plenty of reading suggestions and rabbit holes to follow. Then follow chapters which each shed light on the historical context, and post global financial crisis state and struggles in each of the various industries and sectors of the 'labour of love' including domestic and care work, teaching, retail, nonprofits, creative industries and arts (eye opening chapter!), sports, academia, tech.
8. Zeroing in on the specific industries really highlights some of the broader dynamics on gender and capitalism. I have become quite interested in the more radical end of theories of reproductive labour in capitalism lately (Melinda Cooper wrote some great stuff on this), including, or especially, the critique of the nuclear family as an institution that’s integral to capitalism and that we need to get rid of alongside capitalism and imperialism 😊 This really cuts to the core of our understanding of solidarity and relationships of care beyond the nuclear family, whether straight or rainbow.
9. What's the answer? It's quite straightforward, actually. It's solidarity, real connection beyond the transactional. At the very, very dark heart of neoliberalism, lies the idea that we are all alone and competing in a totalizing market place of everything. From work to romance, everything has been commodified. As work has become love, love has become work. I guess it’s similar to Marx’s theories on the commodity and how social relations within capitalist society exist between commodities while social relations have become commodified (or so). The most potent antidote is to reject this process of atomization and, well, come together and organize. It’s what Bernie referred to when he said ‘fight for someone you don’t know’. What neoliberalism aimed at destroying was solidarity because that’s what always scared ‘the elites’ and only in a society where people are isolated in their struggles can a system that works to the detriment of the ’99 per cent’ flourish. When Thatcher said that ‘economics is the method but the object is the soul’, she meant it.
10. So, contrary to what self-help books make want people believe, the solution to our anxiety and feeling of inadequacy does not lie in becoming ‘more productive’ versions of ourselves, reading three books in ten minutes and increasing our ‘market value’ by adding yet another bullshit degree to our name (Harvard summer course in leadership, anyone? Lol) but in realizing that it’s our society that is sickening, a world that puts profits before people and the planet is the problem, not us. We share this shitty predicament and trying to compete against each other in this fucked up world is preventing us from realizing that, yes indeed, there are alternatives and we can collectively achieve change. We have seen a massive shift to the left (admittedly, also to the right), new movements and ideas that were too radical a few years ago (minimum wage, universal health care, basic income) becoming part of the mainstream political debate. A few years ago, it was easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism. We have become so close to the end of the world, that it now seems for more and more – especially young people – possible to imagine the end of capitalism.
11. (Side note on the post covid pandemic world of work: we must resist the effort to use this new remote work as a means to further atomize us. While it's great to have some level of 'flexible working arrangements', let's be very, very critical of employers' push for greater 'flexibility and agility'. Thanks, but employees don't need greater ‘flexibility and agility’, workers need job security and protection from all forms of abuse. Employees sitting alone at home in front of their screens is a dystopian scenario. Employees need a physical space to be together and discuss what's happening at the workplace so they can develop a sense of collective and push back collectively or stand up for each other, including when contracts are becoming less secure for newly recruited colleagues. Workplace organizing formally and informally remains important and widespread remote working would be the final nail in the coffin of workplace solidarity. Outsourcing and flexible this or what may be useful for the bottom line, but we are not ‘labour costs’, we are human beings. Obviously, working from home has also further blurred the line between home and work which must be rejected. ‘We’ didn’t win historic struggles for the eight-hour working day to end up working in one way or another all day in the 21st century. The entire idea of increasing productivity and such was to reduce the amount of necessary work so we can do something else with our human potential, creative, cultural, social, love, or just enjoying ‘non-productive hobbies such as reading and watching reality TV dating shows 😊 ’Let’s not lose sight of this kind of fundamental question of what it mans to be a human being.)
12. The last (very, very awesome) chapter called “What is Love” starts with a quote which I can’t get out of my head as it sums up this neoliberal hell of work so perfectly “We want to call work what is work so that eventually we might rediscover what is love" <3