Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century

Labor and Monopoly Capital was one of the most important sociological books of its era. It revived academic interest in both the history and the sociology of workplaces setting the agenda for many subsequent historians and sociologists of the workplace. The work started what came to be called, using Braverman's phraseology, "the labor process debate". This had as its focus a close examination the nature of "skill" and the finding that there was a decline in the use of skilled labor as a result of managers strategy for control. It also documented the workers resistance to such managerial strategies

Submitted by vicent on May 2, 2016

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syndicalist

8 years 6 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by syndicalist on May 2, 2016

A classic. I've never fully read it over the decades
Don't remember a whole lot either. But this book influenced many new leftist a
and was a "must read". In spite of my own pea-brain, well worth the read.