The quantified self: what counts in the neoliberal workplace
Article
Moore, P. and Robinson, A. 2016. The quantified self: what counts in the neoliberal workplace. New Media and Society. 18 (11), pp. 2774-2792. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444815604328
Type | Article |
---|---|
Title | The quantified self: what counts in the neoliberal workplace |
Authors | Moore, P. and Robinson, A. |
Abstract | Implementation of quantified self technologies in workplaces relies on the ontological premise of Cartesian dualism with mind dominant over body. Contributing to debates in new materialism, we demonstrate that workers are now being asked to measure our own productivity and health and wellbeing in art-houses and warehouses alike in both the global north and south. Workers experience intensified precarity, austerity, intense competition for jobs, and anxieties about the replacement of labour-power with robots and other machines as well as, ourselves replaceable, other humans. Workers have internalized the imperative to perform, a subjectification process as we become observing, entrepreneurial subjects and observed, objectified labouring bodies. Thinking through the implications of the use of wearable technologies in workplaces, this article shows that these technologies introduce a heightened Taylorist influence on precarious working bodies within neoliberal workplaces. |
Research Group | Law and Politics |
Publisher | Sage |
Journal | New Media and Society |
ISSN | 1461-4448 |
Publication dates | |
Online | 17 Sep 2015 |
01 Dec 2016 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 05 Oct 2015 |
Accepted | 15 Aug 2015 |
Output status | Published |
Additional information | Published online before print September 17, 2015 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444815604328 |
Language | English |
First submitted version |
https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/85xzq
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