In the ongoing debates about the role of immaterial labor in digital media economics, the work of feminist researchers into affective labor performed in the home— “women’s work”—has barely featured. This article is an attempt to address this gap in the dominant framework for discussing consumer labor in digital contexts. It draws on feminist frameworks, particularly the work of Fortunati, in arguing that affective, immaterial labor has a variable and often indirect relationship to capitalist exchange. This indirect relationship allows the products of such work to retain their use-values while nevertheless remaining implicated in systems of exchange. This in turn draws attention to the immaterial product of reproductive labor, which ...
This article addresses the notion of post-Fordism and the feminization of labour in order to provide...
On the face of its virtual and immaterial appearance, digital labour often is seen as a phenomenon o...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
In the ongoing debates about the role of immaterial labor in digital media economics, the work of f...
This article claims that the real promoters of the recent discourse on immaterial labor have been fe...
The activities of consumers in digital media environments have increasingly been conceptualised as l...
In this article, I discuss an issue which lies at the core of today\u2019s \u201cpolitical economy\u...
© 2019 The Author(s) .The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Feminist Rev...
Studies of digital labour are closely connected to the concept of immaterial labour and how this has...
Purpose ? This paper aims to explore the linked series of changes connecting unpaid and paid labour ...
Orthodox Marxist analyses have generally excluded social reproduction activities and realms from the...
It is a truism of socialist feminism that the reproduction of capitalism depends crucially on the un...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 5a: The New Model Worker. While much of autonomist theory ...
In this chapter we open up a debate about how the extension and opening out of intimacy on ‘reality’...
The extraction of surplus value is the defining moment between capitalist and worker, but how do we...
This article addresses the notion of post-Fordism and the feminization of labour in order to provide...
On the face of its virtual and immaterial appearance, digital labour often is seen as a phenomenon o...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...
In the ongoing debates about the role of immaterial labor in digital media economics, the work of f...
This article claims that the real promoters of the recent discourse on immaterial labor have been fe...
The activities of consumers in digital media environments have increasingly been conceptualised as l...
In this article, I discuss an issue which lies at the core of today\u2019s \u201cpolitical economy\u...
© 2019 The Author(s) .The final, definitive version of this paper has been published in Feminist Rev...
Studies of digital labour are closely connected to the concept of immaterial labour and how this has...
Purpose ? This paper aims to explore the linked series of changes connecting unpaid and paid labour ...
Orthodox Marxist analyses have generally excluded social reproduction activities and realms from the...
It is a truism of socialist feminism that the reproduction of capitalism depends crucially on the un...
This paper was presented at Paper Session 5a: The New Model Worker. While much of autonomist theory ...
In this chapter we open up a debate about how the extension and opening out of intimacy on ‘reality’...
The extraction of surplus value is the defining moment between capitalist and worker, but how do we...
This article addresses the notion of post-Fordism and the feminization of labour in order to provide...
On the face of its virtual and immaterial appearance, digital labour often is seen as a phenomenon o...
Taking the form of a discussion among an art historian, a curator and an artist, the article explore...