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2. The Eye Sees What the Mind Knows: The Conceptual Foundations of Invisible Work
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John W. Budd
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Foreword: Invisible Labor, Inaudible Voice xi
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Part One: Exposing Invisible Labor
- 1. Introduction: Conceptualizing Invisible Labor 3
- 2. The Eye Sees What the Mind Knows: The Conceptual Foundations of Invisible Work 28
- 3. Maintaining Hierarchies in Predominantly White Organizations: A Theory of Racial Tasks as Invisible Labor 47
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Part Two. Virtually Invisible: Disembodied Labor via Technology and Globalization
- 4. Virtual Work and Invisible Labor 71
- 5. The Virtual Receptionist with a Human Touch: Opposing Pressures of Digital Automation and Outsourcing in Interactive Services 87
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Part Three. Pushed Out of Sight: Shielded Forms of Embodied Labor
- 6. Hidden from View: Disability, Segregation, and Work 115
- 7. Simply White: Race, Politics, and Invisibility in Advertising Depictions of Farm Labor 130
- 8. Producing Invisibility: Surveillance, Hunger, and Work in the Produce Aisles of Wal-Mart, China 148
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Part Four. Looking Good at Work: Invisible Labor in Plain Sight
- 9. The Female Breast as Brand: The Aesthetic Labor of Breastaurant Servers 171
- 10. The Invisible Consequences of Aesthetic Labor in Upscale Retail Stores 193
- 11. From Invisible Work to Invisible Workers: The Impact of Service Employers’ Speech Demands on the Working Class 214
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Part Five: Branded and Consumed
- 12. Self-Branding among Freelance Knowledge Workers 239
- 13. Consuming Work 257
- 14. Conclusion 279
- About the Editors and Contributors 293
- Index 299
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Foreword: Invisible Labor, Inaudible Voice xi
-
Part One: Exposing Invisible Labor
- 1. Introduction: Conceptualizing Invisible Labor 3
- 2. The Eye Sees What the Mind Knows: The Conceptual Foundations of Invisible Work 28
- 3. Maintaining Hierarchies in Predominantly White Organizations: A Theory of Racial Tasks as Invisible Labor 47
-
Part Two. Virtually Invisible: Disembodied Labor via Technology and Globalization
- 4. Virtual Work and Invisible Labor 71
- 5. The Virtual Receptionist with a Human Touch: Opposing Pressures of Digital Automation and Outsourcing in Interactive Services 87
-
Part Three. Pushed Out of Sight: Shielded Forms of Embodied Labor
- 6. Hidden from View: Disability, Segregation, and Work 115
- 7. Simply White: Race, Politics, and Invisibility in Advertising Depictions of Farm Labor 130
- 8. Producing Invisibility: Surveillance, Hunger, and Work in the Produce Aisles of Wal-Mart, China 148
-
Part Four. Looking Good at Work: Invisible Labor in Plain Sight
- 9. The Female Breast as Brand: The Aesthetic Labor of Breastaurant Servers 171
- 10. The Invisible Consequences of Aesthetic Labor in Upscale Retail Stores 193
- 11. From Invisible Work to Invisible Workers: The Impact of Service Employers’ Speech Demands on the Working Class 214
-
Part Five: Branded and Consumed
- 12. Self-Branding among Freelance Knowledge Workers 239
- 13. Consuming Work 257
- 14. Conclusion 279
- About the Editors and Contributors 293
- Index 299