Description

Book Synopsis

Against the backdrop of an alienating, technologizing and ever-accelerating world of material production, this book tells an intimate story: one about a community of woodworkers training at an historic institution in London’s East End during the present ‘renaissance of craftsmanship’. The animated and scholarly accounts of learning, achievement and challenges reveal the deep human desire to create with our hands, the persistent longing to find meaningful work, and the struggle to realise dreams. In its penetrating explorations of the nature of embodied skill, the book champions greater appreciation for the dexterity, ingenuity and intelligence that lie at the heart of craftwork.



Trade Review

“An exemplary illustration of how the evocative power of a rich ethnography, sympathetic to interlocutors and resulting from long-term, deep personal involvement of the researcher, can bring the reader to connect individual life-paths to crucial societal issues, and ultimately shape discourse about what counts as intelligence, the purpose of education, and the meanings we attribute to work. I can imagine the book becoming required reading as part of curricula on the anthropology of education, the anthropology of work, and…in the education sciences.” • Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (JRAI)

“This book is a beautifully assembled labour of love and all the better for being written by someone who has experienced for himself the sweat and toil involved in manual work. This sets it apart from other treatises on craftmanship as it is written from the perspective of the joiner’s bench in the workshop, combined with insights and analysis gained from a distinguished academic career… Moreover, and invoking the spirit and ideas of Morris and Dewey, it is a plea for recognition of the plurality of intelligences, for raising the profile of skill-based knowledge, and for the reinstatement of practical skills training into a modern education system.” • British Journal of Educational Studies

“In this way, he makes a significant contribution to sharpening the understanding of human knowledge and, especially in his reflections on ethnographic methods and positioning in the field, emphasizes the competencies of culturally analytical-dense description in the interdisciplinary field of knowledge research.” • Schweizerisches Archiv für Volkskunde

"Marchand's 'proximity [to his work] renders this an impassioned book, that alongside its anthropological rigour (with an impressive bibliography to mine), has elements of biography, philosophy, slices of design and craft history, and running throughout, a polemic advancing craft’s position in the world." • Journal of Modern Craft

"Searching for ‘pleasurable work’ may not lead everyone to the practice of fine woodworking. But in searching – and this is what Marchand encourages fervently – one will ideally accumulate experiences that lead to self-confidence, both with regard to the kinds of holistic learning and knowing that best suit oneself and to the kinds of creation that offer a good measure of satisfaction." • H-Soz-Kult

“The detailed ethnographic account of learning a craft will undoubtedly resonate with social anthropologists and ethnographers of work. In addition, the history of the liveries and the development of craft guilds in England will be of interest to historians. And finally, the book’s critiques of current educational policies in the light of the author’s personal experience and insights will be relevant for those who study and make educational policy.” • Exertions

“The narrative is historically informative, provides a thorough overview for anyone interested in a woodwork career and is suitable for a general audience.” • Garland Magazine

“This book stands at the pinnacle of the body of work produced over the course of a career by a distinguished academic; it is the masterpiece of a craftsman who has sought ceaselessly for greater nuances of skillful expression both in his chosen crafts and in his writings about them.” • Roy Dilley, University of St Andrews

The Pursuit of Pleasurable Work is an outstanding contribution to the anthropology of craft and education. Marchand’s ethnographic inquiry into British woodworking is intellectually versatile, bringing the fields of economics and work, education and ideology, as well as neuroscience and philosophy to bear on the everyday concern of crafting a meaningful identity and pleasurable life.” • Erin O’Connor, Marymount Manhattan College



Table of Contents

List of Figures
Preface: Toiling to Live
Acknowledgements

Introduction: A Pursuit of Pleasurable Studies with Woodworkers

Chapter 1. An Anthropologist’s Journey into Craftwork & Apprenticeship
Chapter 2. The Carpenters’ Company & Early London Apprenticeships
Chapter 3. The Building Crafts College: a history
Chapter 4. Getting Started
Chapter 5. Crafting Craftspeople
Chapter 6. Vocational Migrants to Craftwork
Chapter 7. The Intelligent Hand
Chapter 8. Problem Solving at the Bench
Chapter 9. Managing Pleasurable Pursuits
Chapter 10. Skill and Ageing

Epilogue: Towards a Hands-on Curriculum

Bibliography
Index

The Pursuit of Pleasurable Work: Craftwork in

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    A Hardback by Trevor H. J. Marchand

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      View other formats and editions of The Pursuit of Pleasurable Work: Craftwork in by Trevor H. J. Marchand

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781800732742, 978-1800732742
      ISBN10: 1800732740

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Against the backdrop of an alienating, technologizing and ever-accelerating world of material production, this book tells an intimate story: one about a community of woodworkers training at an historic institution in London’s East End during the present ‘renaissance of craftsmanship’. The animated and scholarly accounts of learning, achievement and challenges reveal the deep human desire to create with our hands, the persistent longing to find meaningful work, and the struggle to realise dreams. In its penetrating explorations of the nature of embodied skill, the book champions greater appreciation for the dexterity, ingenuity and intelligence that lie at the heart of craftwork.



      Trade Review

      “An exemplary illustration of how the evocative power of a rich ethnography, sympathetic to interlocutors and resulting from long-term, deep personal involvement of the researcher, can bring the reader to connect individual life-paths to crucial societal issues, and ultimately shape discourse about what counts as intelligence, the purpose of education, and the meanings we attribute to work. I can imagine the book becoming required reading as part of curricula on the anthropology of education, the anthropology of work, and…in the education sciences.” • Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (JRAI)

      “This book is a beautifully assembled labour of love and all the better for being written by someone who has experienced for himself the sweat and toil involved in manual work. This sets it apart from other treatises on craftmanship as it is written from the perspective of the joiner’s bench in the workshop, combined with insights and analysis gained from a distinguished academic career… Moreover, and invoking the spirit and ideas of Morris and Dewey, it is a plea for recognition of the plurality of intelligences, for raising the profile of skill-based knowledge, and for the reinstatement of practical skills training into a modern education system.” • British Journal of Educational Studies

      “In this way, he makes a significant contribution to sharpening the understanding of human knowledge and, especially in his reflections on ethnographic methods and positioning in the field, emphasizes the competencies of culturally analytical-dense description in the interdisciplinary field of knowledge research.” • Schweizerisches Archiv für Volkskunde

      "Marchand's 'proximity [to his work] renders this an impassioned book, that alongside its anthropological rigour (with an impressive bibliography to mine), has elements of biography, philosophy, slices of design and craft history, and running throughout, a polemic advancing craft’s position in the world." • Journal of Modern Craft

      "Searching for ‘pleasurable work’ may not lead everyone to the practice of fine woodworking. But in searching – and this is what Marchand encourages fervently – one will ideally accumulate experiences that lead to self-confidence, both with regard to the kinds of holistic learning and knowing that best suit oneself and to the kinds of creation that offer a good measure of satisfaction." • H-Soz-Kult

      “The detailed ethnographic account of learning a craft will undoubtedly resonate with social anthropologists and ethnographers of work. In addition, the history of the liveries and the development of craft guilds in England will be of interest to historians. And finally, the book’s critiques of current educational policies in the light of the author’s personal experience and insights will be relevant for those who study and make educational policy.” • Exertions

      “The narrative is historically informative, provides a thorough overview for anyone interested in a woodwork career and is suitable for a general audience.” • Garland Magazine

      “This book stands at the pinnacle of the body of work produced over the course of a career by a distinguished academic; it is the masterpiece of a craftsman who has sought ceaselessly for greater nuances of skillful expression both in his chosen crafts and in his writings about them.” • Roy Dilley, University of St Andrews

      The Pursuit of Pleasurable Work is an outstanding contribution to the anthropology of craft and education. Marchand’s ethnographic inquiry into British woodworking is intellectually versatile, bringing the fields of economics and work, education and ideology, as well as neuroscience and philosophy to bear on the everyday concern of crafting a meaningful identity and pleasurable life.” • Erin O’Connor, Marymount Manhattan College



      Table of Contents

      List of Figures
      Preface: Toiling to Live
      Acknowledgements

      Introduction: A Pursuit of Pleasurable Studies with Woodworkers

      Chapter 1. An Anthropologist’s Journey into Craftwork & Apprenticeship
      Chapter 2. The Carpenters’ Company & Early London Apprenticeships
      Chapter 3. The Building Crafts College: a history
      Chapter 4. Getting Started
      Chapter 5. Crafting Craftspeople
      Chapter 6. Vocational Migrants to Craftwork
      Chapter 7. The Intelligent Hand
      Chapter 8. Problem Solving at the Bench
      Chapter 9. Managing Pleasurable Pursuits
      Chapter 10. Skill and Ageing

      Epilogue: Towards a Hands-on Curriculum

      Bibliography
      Index

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