Workers are doing it for themselves? Local labor solidarity in precarious times


Autoria(s): Sanson, Kevin
Data(s)

30/03/2016

Resumo

Historically, organized labor has played a fundamental role in guaranteeing basic rights and privileges for screen media workers and defending union and guild members (however unevenly) from egregious abuses of power. Yet, despite the recent turn to labor in media and cultural studies, organized labor today has received only scant attention, even less so in locations outside Hollywood. This presentation thus intervenes in two significant ways: first, it acknowledges the ongoing global ‘undoing’ of organized labor as a consequence of footloose production and conglomeration within the screen industries, and second, it examines a case example of worker solidarity and political praxis taking shape outside formal labor institutions in response to those structural shifts. Accordingly, it links an empirical study of individual agency to broader debates associated with the spatial dynamics of screen media production, including local capacity, regional competition, and precariousness. Drawing from ethnographic interviews with local film and television workers in Glasgow, Scotland, I consider the political alliance among three nascent labor organizations in the city: one for below-the-line crew, one for facility operators, and (oddly enough) one for producers. Collectively, the groups share a desire to transform Glasgow into a global production hub, following the infrastructure developments in nearby cities like Belfast, Prague, and Budapest. They furthermore frame their objectives in political terms: establishing global scale is considered a necessary maneuver to improve local working conditions like workplace safety, income disparity, skills training, and job access. Ultimately, I argue these groups are a product of an inadequate union structure and outdated policy vision for the screen sector , once-supportive institutions currently out of sync with the global realities of media production. Furthermore, the groups’ advocacy efforts reveal the extent to which workers themselves (in additional to capital) can seek “spatial fixes” to suture their prospects to specific political and economic goals. Of course, such activities manifest under conditions outside of the workers’ control but nevertheless point to an important tension within capitalist social relations, namely that the agency to reshape the spatial relationships in their own lives recasts the geography of labor in terms that aren’t inherent or exclusive to the interests of global capital.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/94920/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/94920/1/SCMS%202016.pdf

Sanson, Kevin (2016) Workers are doing it for themselves? Local labor solidarity in precarious times. In Annual Conference of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies (2016 SCMA), 30 Marh -3 April 2016, Atlanta, GA. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2016 The Author

Fonte

Digital Media Research Centre; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #190201 Cinema Studies #190204 Film and Television #200102 Communication Technology and Digital Media Studies #200104 Media Studies #200206 Globalisation and Culture #200212 Screen and Media Culture #organized labor #precariousness #creative labor #globalization #working conditions
Tipo

Conference Item