ABSTRACT

Part manifesto, part manual, this book offers historians of all levels both subject and approach. The subject is work. In every place-time people made and sold objects – and struggled with annoying customers or government regulation. They healed clients – and wanted to bolster their prestige and keep out interlopers. Studying work allows historians to delve into the experiences of non-elite groups using texts, images, or objects. The wide-ranging approach is based on the Chicago-school sociology of occupations, which starts from the premise that work isn’t just a job: it’s a drama created by people making decisions that shape and are shaped by their place-time. Packed with examples from Ming Chinese apothecaries to twentieth-century New York City doormen, this book is a must for those who want to enliven their study of the past by examining how people spent most of their days and lives: at work.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

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chapter I|19 pages

Technique and Object of Technique

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chapter II|17 pages

The Players in the Social Drama of Work

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chapter III|10 pages

Dirty Work

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chapter IV|21 pages

The Path into the Occupation

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chapter VI|12 pages

Social Authority (License and Mandate)

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chapter VII|17 pages

Technique and Danger (Guilty Knowledge)

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chapter VIII|15 pages

Mistakes at Work

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chapter IX|10 pages

Pace and Discipline

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chapter X|6 pages

The Family Workshop

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chapter IX|6 pages

Conclusion

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