'Don't be a smart arse': Young workers, individualization, and an ethic of enterprise in Jamie's Kitchen
Contribuinte(s) |
Colic-Peisker, Val and Tilbury, Farida McNamara, Bev |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2006
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Resumo |
In Jamie’s Kitchen the high profile celebrity chef Jamie Oliver set out to transform a group of unemployed young Londoners into the enterprising, ideal worker of 21st century flexible capitalism. The paper will argue that this reality TV series provides a means to explore key features of new work regimes. We will analyse particular aspects of the increasingly powerful individualising and normalising processes shaping the lifeworlds of young workers in a globalising risk society. Processes that require those who wish to be positively identified as entrepreneurial to do particular sorts of work on themselves; or suffer the consequences.<br />Drawing on Foucault’s later work on the care of the self, and the individualization theses of the reflexive modernization literature, we identify and analyse the forms of personhood that various institutions, organisations and individuals seek to encourage in young workers; and the ways in which institutionalised risk environments increasingly individualise the risks and uncertainties associated with labour market participation. The paper argues that our understandings of what it means to be a worker of the world, are being rearticulated around the idea that we are free to choose. And we must exercise this freedom – reap its rewards, carry its obligations – as individuals.<br /> |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Sociological Association of Australia (TASA) |
Relação |
http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30009789/harrison-dontbea-2006.pdf http://www.tasa.org.au/conferencepapers06/papers/Education, Work, Stratification and Class/Kelly.pdf |
Direitos |
2006, TASA |
Tipo |
Conference Paper |