Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
About the Editors and Contributors
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
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
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