Labor resides at the center of all media and communication production,
from the workers who create the information technologies that form the
dynamic core of the global capitalist system and the designers who
create media content to the salvage workers who dismantle the industry's
high-tech trash. The Routledge Companion to Labor and Media is the
first book to bring together representative research from the diverse
body of scholarly work surrounding this often fragmentary field, and
seeks to provide a comprehensive resource for the study and teaching of
media and labor. Essays examine work on the mostly unglamorous side of
media and cultural production, technology manufacture, and every
occupation in between.
Specifically, this book features:
-wide-ranging international case studies spanning the major global hubs
of media labor;
-interdisciplinary approaches for thinking about and analyzing class and
labor in information communication technology (ICT), consumer
electronics (CE), and media/cultural production;
-an overview of global political economic conditions affecting media
workers;
-reports on chemical environments and their effect on the health of
media workers and consumers;
-activist scholarship on media and labor, and inspiring stories of
resistance and solidarity.