This article adds to contemporary studies of neoliberalism by offering an empirical investigation of the production of subjectivity in the context of coworking spaces’ sociality. Coworking spaces are exemplary milieux in which to explore the organisation and significance of work. Drawing on the life history of a creative worker and member of a leading coworking space, I unveil the ethical labour that is required to access coworking’s sociality. Using a Foucauldian framework, I conceptualise this process as a process of subjectivation and concentrate on its ambivalent character, signalling the inherent intertwinement of self-commodification and self-improvement. This article contributes to the scholarly debates on the organisation and signif...
Coworking spaces and the correlated practice of coworking, have emerged in different forms and vario...
For more than a decade, co-working spaces have proliferated in cities worldwide. The paper discusses...
The table of contents and introduction are included with kind permission of University of Chester Pr...
This article discusses the growing UK trend of people working for themselves. Beginning with the exa...
This thesis is an investigation of the following question: How is talent recognised in companies tha...
How do we understand the psychic life of cultural workers under neoliberalism? ‘Hope labour’ is a de...
In the aftermath of the financial and economic crisis of 2007 and 2008, a new type of collaborativel...
Implementation of quantified self technologies in workplaces relies on the ontological premise of Ca...
Emerging from the changing social, technological and cultural changes to work, coworking has been po...
As the workforce shifts towards more contingent labor and freelancing and entrepreneurship are on th...
As the workforce shifts towards more contingent labor and freelancing and entrepreneurship are on th...
This master’s thesis investigates how freelancers experience job precarity and asymmetrical power re...
The aim of this chapter is to understand the making of the neoliberal subject in the context of glob...
This thesis explores the discursive construction of work-based subjectivity and identity. It seeks t...
Research into coworking has failed to take space seriously. I address this concern by analysing thre...
Coworking spaces and the correlated practice of coworking, have emerged in different forms and vario...
For more than a decade, co-working spaces have proliferated in cities worldwide. The paper discusses...
The table of contents and introduction are included with kind permission of University of Chester Pr...
This article discusses the growing UK trend of people working for themselves. Beginning with the exa...
This thesis is an investigation of the following question: How is talent recognised in companies tha...
How do we understand the psychic life of cultural workers under neoliberalism? ‘Hope labour’ is a de...
In the aftermath of the financial and economic crisis of 2007 and 2008, a new type of collaborativel...
Implementation of quantified self technologies in workplaces relies on the ontological premise of Ca...
Emerging from the changing social, technological and cultural changes to work, coworking has been po...
As the workforce shifts towards more contingent labor and freelancing and entrepreneurship are on th...
As the workforce shifts towards more contingent labor and freelancing and entrepreneurship are on th...
This master’s thesis investigates how freelancers experience job precarity and asymmetrical power re...
The aim of this chapter is to understand the making of the neoliberal subject in the context of glob...
This thesis explores the discursive construction of work-based subjectivity and identity. It seeks t...
Research into coworking has failed to take space seriously. I address this concern by analysing thre...
Coworking spaces and the correlated practice of coworking, have emerged in different forms and vario...
For more than a decade, co-working spaces have proliferated in cities worldwide. The paper discusses...
The table of contents and introduction are included with kind permission of University of Chester Pr...