Description

Book Synopsis

Since the mid-2000s, the harsh reality of call centre employment for a generation of young workers in Portugal has been impossible to ignore. With its endless rows of small cubicles, where human agents endure repetitive telephone conversations with abusive clients under invasive modes of technological surveillance, discipline and control, call centre work remains a striking symbol of labour precarity, a condition particularly associated with the neoliberal generational disenchantment that ‘each generation does better than its predecessor’.

This book describes the emergence of a regime of disciplined agency in the Portuguese call centre sector. Examining the ascendancy of call centres as icons of precarity in contemporary Portugal, this book argues that call centre labour constitutes a new form of commodification of the labouring subject. De Matos argues that call centres represent an advanced system of non-manual labour power exploitation, due to the underestimation of human creativity that lies at the centre of the regimented structures of call centre labour. Call centres can only guarantee profit maintenance, de Matos argues, through the commodification of the human agency arising from the operators’ moral, relational and social embedded agentive linguistic interventions of creative improvisation, decision-making, problem-solving and ethical evaluation.



Table of Contents

Series editor's foreword
1 Introduction
2 Capitalist and generational transitions in contemporary Portugal
3 Call centres as icons of precarity: between emancipation and stigma
4 The moral economy of labourer production in call centres
5 Clients: operationalising consensus, internalising discipline
6 The production of agency: humans disguised as robots
7 The dispossessed precariat
8 Conclusion
References
Index
Conclusion
Index

Disciplined Agency: Neoliberal Precarity,

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    A Hardback by Patrícia Alves de Matos

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      View other formats and editions of Disciplined Agency: Neoliberal Precarity, by Patrícia Alves de Matos

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 07/07/2020
      ISBN13: 9781526134981, 978-1526134981
      ISBN10: 1526134985

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Since the mid-2000s, the harsh reality of call centre employment for a generation of young workers in Portugal has been impossible to ignore. With its endless rows of small cubicles, where human agents endure repetitive telephone conversations with abusive clients under invasive modes of technological surveillance, discipline and control, call centre work remains a striking symbol of labour precarity, a condition particularly associated with the neoliberal generational disenchantment that ‘each generation does better than its predecessor’.

      This book describes the emergence of a regime of disciplined agency in the Portuguese call centre sector. Examining the ascendancy of call centres as icons of precarity in contemporary Portugal, this book argues that call centre labour constitutes a new form of commodification of the labouring subject. De Matos argues that call centres represent an advanced system of non-manual labour power exploitation, due to the underestimation of human creativity that lies at the centre of the regimented structures of call centre labour. Call centres can only guarantee profit maintenance, de Matos argues, through the commodification of the human agency arising from the operators’ moral, relational and social embedded agentive linguistic interventions of creative improvisation, decision-making, problem-solving and ethical evaluation.



      Table of Contents

      Series editor's foreword
      1 Introduction
      2 Capitalist and generational transitions in contemporary Portugal
      3 Call centres as icons of precarity: between emancipation and stigma
      4 The moral economy of labourer production in call centres
      5 Clients: operationalising consensus, internalising discipline
      6 The production of agency: humans disguised as robots
      7 The dispossessed precariat
      8 Conclusion
      References
      Index
      Conclusion
      Index

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