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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Gabriel Winant on the Rusting of 'Steel City, USA' and the Rise of Healthcare

Gabriel Winant on the Rusting of 'Steel City, USA' and the Rise of Healthcare

Today, healthcare workers account for the largest percentage of U.S. workers. Yet, their power pales in comparison to the unionized industrial workforce that preceded them, and whom it is their job no...

3 Kesä 202152min

Cristina Groeger on Education, Labor, and Inequality in Boston

Cristina Groeger on Education, Labor, and Inequality in Boston

Despite the rising cost of tuition and a recent slump in college enrollment, many Americans continue to look to education to improve their social and economic status. Yet, more and more degrees have n...

3 Touko 202139min

Ronald Schatz on the Labor Board Vets and the Rise of Industrial-Labor Relations

Ronald Schatz on the Labor Board Vets and the Rise of Industrial-Labor Relations

In this episode, labor historian Ronald Schatz speaks about the National War Labor Board. Recruited by the government to help resolve union-management conflicts during World War II, many of the labor ...

27 Maalis 202135min

Rebecca Marchiel on Redlining, Financial Deregulation, and the Urban Reinvestment Movement

Rebecca Marchiel on Redlining, Financial Deregulation, and the Urban Reinvestment Movement

The history of red-lining is one increasingly well-known within and beyond the academy. In the 1930s, as part of an attempt to shore up the struggling economy by underwriting home mortgages, the gover...

14 Helmi 202145min

Shennette Garrett-Scott on Black Women in Finance

Shennette Garrett-Scott on Black Women in Finance

In this episode, Shennette Garrett-Scott explores black financial innovation and its transformative impact on U.S. capitalism through the story of the St. Luke Bank in Richmond, Virginia: the first an...

2 Joulu 202034min

Aaron Jakes on Colonial Economism and Egypt's Occupation

Aaron Jakes on Colonial Economism and Egypt's Occupation

The history of capitalism in Egypt has long been synonymous with cotton cultivation and dependent development. In Egypt's Occupation: Colonial Economism and the Crisis of Capitalism, Aaron Jakes chall...

2 Marras 202044min

Casey Lurtz on Globalization from the Grounds Up

Casey Lurtz on Globalization from the Grounds Up

The history of globalization is one that has often been told as a story of elites. There are a number of truths to this narrative. Yet, as Casey Lurtz shows, it also ignores some things. In From the G...

4 Syys 202048min

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