The Sociology Book

(Romina) #1

232


A U T O M A T I O N I N C R E A S E S


T H E W O R K E R ’ S C O N T R O L


O V E R H I S W O R K P R O C E S S


ROBERT BLAUNER (1929– )


A


lienation occurs when
workers are disconnected
from and lack control over
their work, according to Karl Marx.
In his influential book on industrial
society, Alienation and Freedom:
The Factory Worker and His
Industry (1964), US sociologist
Robert Blauner draws heavily
on Marx’s concept of alienation

to examine the possibility that
alienation in the workplace can
be significantly reduced by the
effective use of technology.
Blauner claims alienation
is central to understanding the
negative impact of automation
on workers during and after the
Industrial Revolution. His text
critically assesses Marx’s claim

Workers in different industries experience varying levels
of alienation in automated work processes...

Knowledge of automation
increases the worker’s control over work
processes and reduces alienation.

...those who
lack knowledge of and
control over technology
have high levels of
alienation.

...those with
expert knowledge
of technology
have low levels of
alienation.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Alienation

KEY DATES
1844 Karl Marx introduces
the concept of estrangement
or alienation from the world
in Economic and Philosophic
Manuscripts of 1844.

1950–60 Increasing
industrialization of the
US economy leads to the
significant occupational
restructuring of society.

1960 The concept of alienation
is imported into US sociology
by theorists from the neo-
Marxist “Frankfurt School.”

1964 Robert Blauner’s
work redirects the focus
of US, French, and British
sociologists on alienation
and automation.

2000–present Commercial
organizations such as Apple
and Microsoft seek to
empower workers by using
automated work processes.
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