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'''Affective labor''' is a [[Terminology|term]] identifying [[Labour (economics)|work]] carried out in specific historical contexts that is intended to produce or modify affective experiences in people. Although its history is as old as that of [[Labour (economics)|labor]] itself, affective labor has been of increasing importance to modern [[economies]] since the emergence of mass culture in the nineteenth century. The most prominent institutionalized form of affective labor is perhaps [[advertising]], which typically attempts to make audiences relate to products through particular effects. But there are many other areas in which affective labor figures prominently, including [[service industry|service and care industries]] whose purpose is to make people feel in particular ways.
'''Affective labor''' is a [[Terminology|term]] identifying [[Labour (economics)|work]] carried out that is intended to produce or modify emotional experiences in people. It has been the focus of critical discussions by [[Antonio Negri]] and [[Michael Hardt]], as well as Juan Martin Prada and [[Michael Betancourt]].
Although its history is as old as that of [[Labour (economics)|labor]] itself, affective labor has been of increasing importance to modern [[economies]] since the emergence of mass culture in the nineteenth century. The most prominent institutionalized form of affective labor is perhaps [[advertising]], which typically attempts to make audiences relate to products through particular effects. But there are many other areas in which affective labor figures prominently, including [[service industry|service and care industries]] whose purpose is to make people feel in particular ways.


==Hardt and Negri on affective labor==
==Hardt and Negri on affective labor==

Revision as of 13:51, 6 September 2010

Affective labor is a term identifying work carried out that is intended to produce or modify emotional experiences in people. It has been the focus of critical discussions by Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt, as well as Juan Martin Prada and Michael Betancourt.

Although its history is as old as that of labor itself, affective labor has been of increasing importance to modern economies since the emergence of mass culture in the nineteenth century. The most prominent institutionalized form of affective labor is perhaps advertising, which typically attempts to make audiences relate to products through particular effects. But there are many other areas in which affective labor figures prominently, including service and care industries whose purpose is to make people feel in particular ways.

Hardt and Negri on affective labor

Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt have begun to develop this concept in their books Empire[1] and Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire[2].

In their recent work, Hardt and Negri focus on the role affective labor plays in the current mode of production (which can be referred to as "imperial," "late capitalist," or "postmodern"). In this passage from Multitude they briefly define their key terms:

"Unlike emotions, which are mental phenomena, affects refer equally to body and mind. In fact, affects, such as joy and sadness, reveal the present state of life in the entire organism, expressing a certain state of the body along with a certain mode of thinking. Affective labor, then, is labor that produces or manipulates affects.... One can recognize affective labor, for example, in the work of legal assistants, flight attendants, and fast food workers (service with a smile). One indication of the rising importance of affective labor, at least in the dominant countries, is the tendency for employers to highlight education, attitude, character, and "prosocial" behavior as the primary skills employees need. A worker with a good attitude and social skills is another way of saying a worker is adept at affective labor”" [3]

The most important point in their scholarship with respect to this issue is that immaterial labor, of which affective labor is a specific form, has achieved dominance in the current mode of production. This does not mean that there are more immaterial laborers than material laborers, or that immaterial labor produces more capital than material labor. Instead, this dominance is signaled by the fact that, in developed countries, labor is more often figured as immaterial than material. To illustrate the significance of this claim, they draw a comparison between the early twenty-first-century and that of the mid-nineteenth-century, famously engaged by Karl Marx, in which factory labor was dominant even if it was not the form of labor practiced by the most people. One popular, albeit slightly less than perfect example, of this might be that, whereas Fred Flintstone, as an average American, drove a crane in a quarry, Homer Simpson sits at a desk and provides safety.

Role in the Political Economy

Michael Betancourt has suggested that affective labor may have a role in the development and maintenance of what he has termed "agnotologic capitalism." His point is that affective labor is a symptom of the disassociation between the reality of capitalist economy and the alienation it produces:

The affective labor created to address this alienation is part of the mechanisms where the agnotological order maintains its grip on the social: managing the emotional states of the consumers, who also serve as the labor reserve, is a necessary precondition for the effective management of the quality and range of information.[4]

His construction of affective labor is concerned with its role as an enabler for a larger capitalist superstructure. Where the reduction alienation of alienation is a precondition for the elimination of dissent. Affective labor is part of a larger activity where the population is distracted by affective pursuits and fantasies of economic advancement.

See also

References

  1. ^ Hardt, M. and Negri, A. (2000) Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  2. ^ Hardt, M. and Negri, A. (2004) Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire. New York: Penguin.
  3. ^ Hardt, M. and Negri, A. (2004) Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire. New York: Penguin, p. 108.
  4. ^ ""Immaterial Value and Scarcity in Digital Capitalism", CTheory, Theory Beyond the Codes: tbc002, Date Published: 6/10/2010, Arthur and Marilouise Kroker, Editors".