Work

Kapitalismus, Wirtschaft, Widerstand

Paperback, 351 pages

German language

Published Jan. 23, 2014 by Unrast Verlag.

ISBN:
978-3-89771-542-4
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OCLC Number:
898149418

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4 stars (2 reviews)

Warum müssen wir, trotz all des technischen Fortschritts, immer mehr arbeiten? Warum werden wir – im Gegensatz zu unseren Bossen – trotzdem immer ärmer? Warum sorgen sich die Leute um ihre Jobs und den Zusammenbruch der Wirtschaft, obwohl kaum jemand seine / ihre (Lohn-)Arbeit mag? – Um diese und eine ganze Menge weiterer Fragen beantworten zu können, musste CrimethInc., das dezentral organisierte lose Kollektiv mit Wurzeln in der Hardcore- und Anarcho-Punk-Szene Nordamerikas, düstere Teile der Geschichte studieren und endlose Aufzeichnungen darüber vergleichen, wie Ausbeutung im alltäglichen Leben erfahren wird. Doch dann gelang es ihm, eine ›große vereinheitlichte Feldtheorie über den aktuellen Kapitalismus‹ auszuarbeiten…

(Quelle: Unrast Verlag)

2 editions

Work

3 stars

For me it was a nice overview about the very basic mechanisms of work and capitalism. Really liked the small stories inbetween and for the first time i've understood how the economic crisis in 2008 worked. I'd especially recommend the chapter on economic and banks, it gives a basic rundown on what certain mechanisms are and how they're called. What really bothers me though: the book is really white and has a very certain perspective on things. There's no bigger mention of race, slavery and colonialism and how it's linked to capitalism. And personally I think it's unhelpful not to mention the books and authors where the writers got their ideas from, a) because it makes fact checking and further reasearch more complicated and b) it can be disrespectful if those authors are already more marginalized.

Review of 'Work' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Despite how much I enjoyed it, for the most part this book isn't really innovative. Instead it serves as a modern restatement of the nature of capitalism and how it has pervaded so many aspects of our lives. The analysis is insightful and low on the romanticisation Crimethinc are prone to (love it as I may). The damning fashion in which the many ranks and roles are tied together is lucid but lacks the usual vitriol that can be alienating for readers who might realise the part they play in this insidious scheme.

The look at the workings of some areas of economics comes across well, something that far too many anarchist texts lack, the numbers and systemic criticisms of capitalism that are vital to analysis.

The presentation is pretty nice, the centrepoint of the updated capitalist pyramid is a great idea and a nice tip of the hat to …

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  • Work