For much of the twentieth century, the iconic figure of the U.S. working class was a white, male industrial worker. But in the contemporary age of capitalist globalization new stories about work and workers are emerging to refashion this image. Living Labor examines these narratives and, in the process, offers an innovative reading of American fiction and film through the lens of precarious work. It argues that since the 1980s, novelists and filmmakers—including Russell Banks, Helena Víramontes, Karen Tei Yamashita, Francisco Goldman, David Riker, Ramin Bahrani, Clint Eastwood, Courtney Hunt, and Ryan Coogler—have chronicled the demise of the industrial proletariat, and the tentative and unfinished emergence of a new, much more diverse and perilously positioned working class. In bringing together stories of work that are also stories of race, ethnicity, gender, and colonialism, Living Labor challenges the often-assumed division between class and identity politics. Through the concept of living labor and its discussion of solidarity, the book reframes traditional notions of class, helping us understand both the challenges working people face and the possibilities for collective consciousness and action in the global present.Cover attribution: Allan Sekula, Shipwreck and worker, Istanbul,fromTITANIC’s wake, 1998/2000. Courtesy of the Allan Sekula Studio.
Joseph B. Entin is Professor of English and American Studies at Brooklyn College, City University of New York.
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Narratives of Living LaborChapter 1. “We are the Planet”: Impossible Solidarities in Russell Banks’s Continental DriftChapter 2. “Maps of Labor”: Globalization, Migration, and Contemporary Working-Class LiteratureChapter 3. Living Labor, Dead Labor: Cinema, Solidarity, and NecrocapitalismChapter 4. “The Uprooted Worker at the Center of the World”: Labor, Migration, and Precarity on the Urban Underside of Independent CinemaCoda: Forms of Solidarity in Precarious TimesIndex
“Living Labor aims to update the critical discussion of contemporary American working-class literature to reflect the complex and contested realities of the current era, in which class itself has become increasingly contingent. The book is clear, persuasive, informative, and thought-provoking.”