Book Name  Essential Sociology (Nitin Sangwan)

Book No. – 28 (Sociology)

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1. Social Organisation of Work in Different Types of Societies Slave. Feudal, Industrial/Capitalist

1.1. Social Determinants of Economic Development

1.2. Industrialisation and Social Change

1.3. Formal and Informal Organisation of Work

1.4. Labour and Society

2. Question Bank

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LANGUAGE

Work and Economic Life

Chapter – 6

Picture of Harshit Sharma
Harshit Sharma

Alumnus (BHU)

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Table of Contents
  • Notion of work in Sociology differs from natural sciences; it is not mere expenditure of energy but a social activity performed in a group involving power relations, social dynamics, functions, and conflict.

  • Marxian thought links work with Industrialisation and workers–owners relations, forming the foundation of Sociology along with Modernisation.

  • Marxian materialistic conception of history emphasises economic relations which spill over into other areas of life.

  • Workplace is integral to human identity, extending between work-life and home-life.

  • Recent emphasis on HR management and workplace satisfaction highlights importance of workplace sociology.

  • Biblical teachings view work as punishment for sin, while Calvinists see it as a calling; Hindu philosophy of Karma links work with duty; production of goods/services is also a source of creativity, happiness, and satisfaction.

  • Marx: loss of control over work leads to alienation.

  • Durkheim: work is an integrating force and basis of organic solidarity.

  • In modern societies, work dominates life more than any other activity.

  • Definition of work – tasks requiring mental and physical effort to produce goods/services for human needs; in economic sociology, it often implies paid employment, reward, or contract.

  • Earlier work – simple, community-based, home-centered before Industrialisation.

  • Modern society – complex division of labour and shift of work location outside home.

  • Marx studied alienation and deskilling in factory work.

  • Durkheim saw work as integration.

  • Weber analysed authority in modern bureaucratic organisations of work.

  • Sociology of work is vital as economy and production influence all parts of society (hunter-gatherer, feudal, industrial).

  • Importance of work in modern society:

    • Source of income and living.

    • Provides direction to energy for skill development.

    • Breaks monotony of domestic life.

    • Expands social contacts and builds social capital.

    • Gives identity (people known by occupation in industrial societies).

  • Concept of work linked with Industrialisation and Capitalism.

  • Worker – one who enters employment by will, under contractual relations; distinct from labour, who lacks choice and may be forced (child labour, bonded labour, rural labour).

  • Employment – narrower than work.

  • Contemporary era – flexible production and decentralisation due to globalisation and competition.

  • Internet and e-commerce created virtual workplaces.

  • Technology changes nature of work; Robert Blauner argued more technology → more alienation.

  • Frank Hull et al. (2016) – confirmed Blauner but argued relationship is linear, not curvilinear.

  • Modern post-industrial societies show diversity in work: service industry, entrepreneurship, automation, inter-disciplinary work.

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