Katie Hindmarch-Watson on London's Telecommunications Work and Serving a Wired World

Katie Hindmarch-Watson on London's Telecommunications Work and Serving a Wired World

It is common these days to bemoan the amount of personal information companies like Amazon, Facebook, and other modern telecommunications goliaths collect about us. For many, this invasion of privacy exists as a necessary consequence of our growing dependence on the internet. With every click of the mouse—making it possible to have products manufactured half-way around the world delivered to our doorstep—there is a reluctant awareness of the risk that our private lives might be made public.

That sense of the potential of our private lives being made public is all the more real when we acknowledge the human beings at the center of these information networks. Our modern service economy relies on people whose jobs involve an intimate awareness of our daily lives—the Amazon delivery person who brings us toilet paper, the barista who procures for us our morning coffee and knows whether we prefer cream or almond milk; the data analyst who knows what new titillating show we're watching and uses that information to sell us on the latest product. Our desire for on-demand services is satisfied through these people having access to information about us, all the more so amid the ongoing pandemic. Katie Hindmarch-Watson has spent many years thinking about the human labor involved in making a service economy. In Serving a Wired World: London's Telecommunication Workers and the Making of an Information Capital, she shows how concerns about privacy and information were at the center Victorian-era London's telecommunications industry centered around the telegraph and telephone: the internet of its day. In doing so, she takes us on a journey involving telegraph boys ensnared in homosexual scandal and wicked telephone girls suspected of interrupting connections, all the while revealing the intimate and bodied labor that made (an) information capital.

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Tim Keogh on Suburban Poverty and the Roots of Postwar Inequality

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In 2022, roughly one in 10 suburban residents lived in poverty (9.6%), compared to about one in six in primary cities (16.2%), according to a recent study by the Brookings Institute. The issue of subu...

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Premilla Nadasen on the Care Economy and the Potential for Radical Care

Premilla Nadasen on the Care Economy and the Potential for Radical Care

Today, discussions of care are ubiquitous. From employer-programs promoting self-care to the $800 billion healthcare industry, care forms a central part of our lives and the economy. But, are the syst...

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Hannah Forsyth on the Rise and Fall of the Professional Class in the Anglophone World

Hannah Forsyth on the Rise and Fall of the Professional Class in the Anglophone World

Are you a professional living and working in an English-speaking country? If so, this episode is for you. Teachers, doctors, nurses, accountants, engineers, lawyers, social workers, the list goes on...

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Bart Elmore on Southern Companies Remaking our Economy and the Planet

Bart Elmore on Southern Companies Remaking our Economy and the Planet

An iced cold Coca-Cola. A cross-country flight on Delta to visit friends. A much-needed medication overnighted via Fed-Ex. Bulk toilet paper purchased at Wal-Mart. What do these items have in common? ...

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Mark Erlich on the Way We Build and Restoring Dignity to Construction Work

Mark Erlich on the Way We Build and Restoring Dignity to Construction Work

This month's episode gives a nod to one of the figures in our logo: the construction worker. Our guest, Mark Erlich has worked in the construction industry as a carpenter and union leader for a half c...

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Chelsea Schields on Oil, Intimacy, and the Offshore

Chelsea Schields on Oil, Intimacy, and the Offshore

In this month's episode, guest Chelsea Schields discusses oil refining and intimacy, illuminating the social ties and affective attachments engendered by oil in the Dutch islands of Aruba and Curaçao...

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