Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work

241 pages

English language

Published July 17, 2009

ISBN:
978-1-59420-223-0
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Goodreads:
6261332

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4 stars (21 reviews)

3 editions

Éloge d'Éloge du Carburateur

5 stars

M'a bien brossé dans le sens du poil, c'était chouette. 🐈‍⬛ Par contre c'est peut-être mon ignorance en philo ou le fait que je lis dans les transports, j'ai pas eu le sentiment de réussir à m'imprégner de tout ce qu'il y avait à dire, et à bien faire tourner mon esprit critique. J'ai eu quelques doutes sur la traduction et y'a quelques propos de l'auteur que j'ai trouvés déplacés, mais tout ça est anecdotique dans le contexte du bouquin.

J'ai perçu pas mal de continuité avec des changements d'aujourd'hui (notamment l'utilisation de génération par ordinateur) et avec mon boulot qui n'est pourtant pas un travail manuel. De la même manière, l'auteur développe sur la manière dont les objets occultent de plus en plus leur fonctionnement et ce que ça implique pratiquement et philosophiquement, chose que je constate en informatique et qui s'accorde avec mes idées de libriste.

La partie …

Review of 'Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

The philosophy is needlessly opaque and the author does not always hold himself to the discipline he credits manual labor and the trades for instilling in us. But the ideas of how we value working with our heads over working with our minds are brilliant, pointed and important. I wanted to learn plumbing after reading this. Like, immediately. 

Review of 'Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

My quick summary of this book: "Gosh, why don't more kids enter the trades? It's so remunerative! Plus there's all the bullying and sexual harassment! Doesn't that sound like fun?" I'm being reductive, of course, and there are a few good nuggets of wisdom in here, but parts of this really rubbed me the wrong way. I wanted a stirring defense of the trades, and some practical advice for entering them, but instead you get a lot of warmed over classics references, some thinly veiled and poorly thought-out libertarian arguments, and some not-veiled-at-all sexism instead. About half of this book is quite thoughtful, which kept me reading. But I was having a distracting imaginary argument with the author throughout.

Review of 'Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

An excellent book. The author talks about a number of things that I've been thinking about many topics, and does it in a very engaging way, with quite a few footnotes for further reading. Working with one's hands versus not, different kinds of knowledge, communities of knowledge, what is a satisfying way to live, all sort of things.

I might add that I read this very fast (for me), so issues with slow, dragged-out writing that other reviewers mention did not occur to me. I had a fine time reading it in a brief period.

Other reviewers say that they think Dr. Crawford comes off as macho, or that the book is male-centered. It is true that women are mentioned very little throughout, and, I think, never as people whom the author admires. Specifically, there are no women referenced by name among his motorcycle/automobile mechanic comrades. I think this may …

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