1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910629589803321

Titolo

Working at night : the temporal organisation of labour across political and economic regimes / / edited by Gerlachlus Duijzings, Libuše Dušková

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Berlin ; ; Boston : , : De Gruyter, , [2022]

©2022

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (vi, 273 pages) : illustrations, maps

Collana

Work in global and historical perspective

Disciplina

331.257

Soggetti

Hours of labor

Industrial productivity - History - 20th century

Labor productivity

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

" ... Working night and day" : working at night as a metaphor in Paul's First epistle to the Thessalonians / Antoine Paris -- The nights of Bombay workers (1870-1920) / Arun Kumar -- Nightwork in Lisbon (1890-1915) / Rosa Maria Fina -- Night work restrictions in interwar Czechoslovakia (1918-1938) / Jakub Ra´kosni´k -- Disrupted times : continuous shift workers in societal and sociological debates between boom and crisis (1945-1975) / Malte Mu¨ller -- "Enter the world of danger, drama and death!" : the perception of the night nurse in popular fiction (1970s-1990s) / Anja Katharina Peters -- "Threatening our home life" : shop hours and white women retail workers' struggles around evening hours in Johannesburg South Africa (1908-1960s) / Bridget Kenny -- The socialist image of the night shift and its practices (1945-1966) / Lucie Dus?kova´ -- Not only night work : time difference, national power-geometry and night communications in contemporary far-eastern Russia / Asya Karaseva, Maria Momzikova -- Delivering the night-time economy home : nocturnal labour and temporalities of platform work / Simiran Lalvani -- Expanding the limits : towards a history of working and waking in modern societies / Hannah Ahlheim.



Sommario/riassunto

The night represents almost universally a special, liminal or "out of the ordinary" temporal zone with its own meanings, possibilities and dangers, and political, cultural, religious and social implications. Only in the modern era was the night systematically "colonised" and nocturnal activity "normalised," in terms of (industrial) labour and production processes. Although the globalised 24/7 economy is usually seen as the outcome of capitalist modernisation, development and expansion starting in the late nineteenth century, other consecutive and more recent political and economic systems adopted perpetual production systems as well, extending work into the night and forcing workers to work the "night shift," normalising it as part of an alternative non-capitalist modernity. This volume draws attention to the extended work hours and night shift work, which have remained underexplored in the history of labour and the social science literature. By describing and comparing various political and economic "regimes," it argues that, from the viewpoint of global labour history, night labour and the spread of 24/7 production and services should not be seen, only and exclusively, as an epiphenomenon of capitalist production, but rather as one of the outcomes of industrial modernity.