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[Commlist] New book: Media and Management
Fri Feb 18 21:08:03 GMT 2022
Cultural studies friends,
New book, Media and Management, collaboratively written by Melissa Gregg
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/melgregg/>, Rutvica Andrijasevic
<https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/persons/rutvica-andrijasevic>,
Julie Chen <https://ischool.utoronto.ca/profile/julie-yujie-chen/> and
Marc Steinberg
<https://www.concordia.ca/finearts/cinema/faculty.html?fpid=marc-steinberg>.
It’s open access and available now @
https://meson.press/books/media-and-management/
<https://meson.press/books/media-and-management/>
The central insight of this book is that platform capitalism has a
hardware history. Against the trend of studying manufacturing and
platform labour separately, we explore the concept of ‘just-in-time’
(JIT) to show historical and geographical continuities in labour regimes
from hardware to software. In 3 short chapters, we illustrate how
Toyota’s production techniques in mid-20th century Japan have been
integrated in runaway assembly lines in Central and Eastern Europe,
following decades of inter-continental pollination with corporate
managerial practices. We show how digital platforms are steeped in the
history of automobile and hardware manufacture: “lean” and “agile”
workers are not a recent invention.
This book shifts attention from Silicon Valley to Japan, China and
Central and Eastern Europe to propose an alternative global geography of
media production. Working across disciplines of Media, Culture and
Organization Studies allows us to observe the blurred boundaries between
factory labour and today’s on-demand online services.
The COVID lockdown affecting so many of us gave rise to the
conversations archived in this work. We hope it is a topical teaching
resource for many of you, especially as we wrestle with daily evidence
of the humanity driving so-called supply chains that deliver our digital
everyday.
Endorsements
“This timely collection reminds us how the latest forms of algorithmic
management are extensions of the long history of industrialized labor.
We can only understand the future of work when we contend with the
patterns of the past and how they manifest around the world.”
— Kate Crawford, author of Atlas of AI
“This remarkable book critically probes hardware manufacturing practices
and histories in the Asia Pacific, insisting media theory and management
studies recompose in ways attentive to real-time labor regimes and the
organizational force of global logistics.”
— Ned Rossiter, Western Sydney University
“This original book links up Toyotism, just-in-time management, and
platform capitalism, all in one volume. I especially liked the main
geographical foci of the chapters being on non-western countries: Japan,
China, and Central and Eastern Europe.”
— Jack Linchuan Qiu, National University of Singapore
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