ABSTRACT

The first book to delineate anti-work in a systematic fashion by identifying and compiling positions from a wide spread of literature, Anti- Work: Psychological Investigations into Its Truths, Problems, and Solutions defines the tenets of anti-work, reviews them from a psychological and historical point of view, and offers solutions to aid the average person in his or her struggle with work.

Anti-work thinkers have vigorously argued that work entails a submission of the human will that is constraining and even ultimately damaging. The author has refined 18 tenets of anti-work from the literature, which range from the suggestion that all jobs are bad, to the remarkable ability of modern capitalist enterprises to build "job engagement" among workers, to the proposal of alternative work- deemphasized worlds. Anti-Work begins with a discussion of these tenets, in particular the submission of the will required by work, followed by an overview of topics such as worker resistance, merit, and precarious work. The second part of the book unfolds various possible human responses to the work problem, such as detachment, thinking while working, and right livelihood. In the third part, several lessons about anti-work are drawn from parables, koans, and tales. Discussions of cults and work, working from home, unions, and cooperatives, as well as lessons from Buddhism, Hinduism, and Christianity, offer additional perspectives on the topic of work and provide guidance on developing a helpful attitude toward it.

By highlighting the tensions that exist between anti-work and pro-work positions, the book provides new ways to view and plan life, and will give thought- provoking and valuable insights for students, instructors, and practitioners in industrial and organizational psychology and related fields, as well as all people who have worked, will work, have never worked, or will never work.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

What Is Anti-Work?

part One|118 pages

In Which Anti-Work Is Given Serious Consideration

chapter Chapter One|26 pages

The Tenets of Anti-Work

chapter Chapter Two|14 pages

Will, Bosses, and Consciousness

chapter Chapter Three|14 pages

Cults and Working from Home

chapter Chapter Four|12 pages

The Asymmetry of At-Will Employment and Loss of Autonomy

chapter Chapter Five|9 pages

The Unique Submission Required for Precarious Work

chapter Chapter Six|12 pages

Merit Misfires

chapter Chapter Seven|20 pages

Pushing Back

chapter Chapter Eight|8 pages

Doubtful Horizons

part Two|71 pages

In Which We Reflect on Some Possible Realities and Responses

chapter Chapter Nine|12 pages

Science and the Ox

Understanding Work and Workers

chapter Chapter Ten|16 pages

Representing the Worker

What We Might Do

chapter Chapter Eleven|9 pages

Detachment

Lessons from the Bhagavad Gita

chapter Chapter Twelve|6 pages

Alignment of Efforts

Teilhard de Chardin

chapter Chapter Thirteen|9 pages

Thinking While You Work

Simone Weil

chapter Chapter Fourteen|7 pages

“Right Livelihood”

chapter Chapter Fifteen|7 pages

Note on Unions and Cooperatives

part Three|61 pages

Coda

chapter |26 pages

Lessons A–F

chapter |33 pages

Conclusion