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Critical and historical notes and separate memoirs of Christopher Marlowe, Robert Greene, and Ben Jonson.
Canadian politics is/are not well understood, no authority being prepared to say whether it/they is/are singular or plural. Canadian Politics Unplugged bravely breaks new ground in ignoring this question. The book concentrates on the central problem of democracy in a country that is too big to digest without getting gas.
Readers are assured that the authors have studied Canadian politics for years, from a safe distance, and enjoy the unique perspective of never having been elected to high office, low office, or any place where wearing shoes is mandatory.
Canadian Politics Unplugged is Whalley and Nicol’s fifth successful collaboration.
Engineers appear in recent social science as central, though somewhat elusive, figures. They play a particularly critical role in the various attempts to understand the impact of ‘science-based’ industry on the class structure of advanced capitalist societies. In this book, Peter Whalley brings these engineers into sharper focus. He argues that engineers should not be seen as members of a glamorous ‘new class’ of professionalized knowledge workers, nor as a radicalized ‘new working class’ or partially de-skilled technical proletariat. Rather, they should be viewed as ‘trusted employees,’ selected, socialized, trained, and rewarded to perform the discretionary tasks necessarily delegated by employers in the complex organizations of advanced capitalism.
The book draws extensively on observations and interviews to compare engineers’ work and understanding in the high- and low-tech settings of two British companies: “Computergraph,” an advanced electronics firm, and “Metalco,” a traditional British engineering giant. Whalley compares the technical work structure of Britain with those of France and the United States. He argues that the impact of technological change on class structure is critically mediated by nationally specific modes of organizing technical work and producing trusted workers. The book goes beyond cultural explanations of these national variations to examine how they are created and reproduced in the organization of work and the structuring of occupations.
The book draws extensively on observations and interviews to compare engineers’ work and understanding in the high- and low-tech settings of two British companies: “Computergraph,” an advanced electronics firm, and “Metalco,” a traditional British engineering giant. Whalley compares the technical work structure of Britain with those of France and the United States. He argues that the impact of technological change on class structure is critically mediated by nationally specific modes of organizing technical work and producing trusted workers. The book goes beyond cultural explanations of these national variations to examine how they are created and reproduced in the organization of work and the structuring of occupations.
Canadian politics is/are not well understood, no authority being prepared to say whether it/they is/are singular or plural. Canadian Politics Unplugged bravely breaks new ground in ignoring this question. The book concentrates on the central problem of democracy in a country that is too big to digest without getting gas.
Readers are assured that the authors have studied Canadian politics for years, from a safe distance, and enjoy the unique perspective of never having been elected to high office, low office, or any place where wearing shoes is mandatory.
Canadian Politics Unplugged is Whalley and Nicol’s fifth successful collaboration.