Paradoxical Empowerment: Immaterial Labor Translated in a Web of Affective Connections
Heaton, L. et Proulx, S. (2015). Paradoxical Empowerment: Immaterial Labor Translated in a Web of Affective Connections. The Information Society: An International Journal, 31(1), 28-35.
Serge Proulx
This perspective explores the production of user-generated content by contrasting two analyses that are convergent in some respects, divergent in others. In our first line of analysis we use the work of Negri (1996) and Moulier-Boutang (2007) on “cognitive capitalism” to extend some elements explored by Fuchs (2010; 2012) and Arvidsson and Colleoni (2012) on labor and value. This approach foregrounds the adaptability of capitalism and suggests that workers are endowed with “an inventive subjective power” that simultaneously influences and reproduces the mode of production. Our second line of analysis explores the later work of André Gorz (1997; 2003), who invites us to imagine a society in which social relationships would no longer be determined by the laws of the market, a postmarket utopia. This approach points to the importance of collective organization and relational value production of user-generated content and suggests recentering the debate not around individuals and their labor, but on the web of affective connections between them.
Ce contenu a été mis à jour le 4 novembre 2019 à 15 h 31 min.