The Sociology Book

(Romina) #1

233


Automated technology on car
assembly lines should be organized
and deployed in ways that enable the
manufacturing workers to regain a
sense of control over their environment.

See also: Karl Marx 28–31 ■ Erich Fromm 188 ■ Daniel Bell 224–25 ■
Harry Braverman 226–31 ■ Arlie Hochschild 236–43 ■ Michael Burawoy 244–45


WORK AND CONSUMERISM


that all workers are necessarily
alienated due to the increased
automation of work. Blauner
suggests, on the contrary, that
automation can actually facilitate,
empower, and liberate workers.
Using a wide range of data
(including statistics, interviews
with workers, and attitudinal
surveys), Blauner examines four
types of industry: craft printing,
car assembly lines, textile
machine-tending, and chemical-
processing. Alienation levels are
tested according to four criteria:
job control, social isolation,
sense of self-estrangement,
and meaningfulness of work.


Technology and alienation
Blauner describes his results as
conforming to an “inverted U
curve.” According to his study,
alienation is typically very low
among print workers. He suggests
that the use of machinery is
empowering for these employees
because it provides them with
greater control and autonomy.
The same is true for workers in
chemical-processing plants: again,
these individuals are empowered,


he proposes, because they possess
expert knowledge of the relevant
technology, which in turn is
meaningful and fulfilling because
it furnishes them with a significant
degree of control over their work
experience and environment.
By contrast, the automated
technology used in car production
and in textile factories leads to
relatively high levels of alienation.
These findings seem to contradict
Blauner’s claim that greater
automation diminishes alienation.
To explain this, however, he argues
that it is not technology itself that
alienates workers, but a lack of
control over the way it is used, how
work is organized, and the nature of
the relationships between workers
and management.
Blauner concludes that under
the right organizational conditions,
automation increases the worker’s
control over his work process and
diminishes a sense of alienation
in equal measure.
Blauner’s study has greatly
influenced the sociology of work,
as testified by follow-up studies

conducted by sociologists in
the US, as well as in Britain
and France during the 1970s and
1980s. Furthermore, the “political”
character of Blauner’s work
means studies of alienating work
environments have fed into, and
strongly influenced, commercial
working directives and policies.
The global technology firm Apple,
for example, is renowned for
investing heavily in training staff
to use Apple technology to enhance
their working experience as well as
their own personal lives. ■

Robert Blauner


Robert Blauner is an emeritus
professor of sociology at
the University of California,
Berkeley. He was awarded
his undergraduate degree
from the University of Chicago
in 1948.
Blauner was a staunch
communist, and after
graduating he worked in
factories for five years, aiming
to inspire a working-class
revolution. Unsuccessful in
those efforts, he completed
his MA and PhD at Berkeley
in 1962. His PhD thesis
became the 1964 study that
established his reputation. In
addition to his contributions
to the study of alienation
and work, Blauner has made
penetrating analyses of race
relations in the US.

Key works

1964 Alienation and Freedom:
The Factory Worker and His
Industry
1972 Radical Oppression
in America
1989 Black Lives, White Lives:
Three Decades of Race
Relations in America

Alienation exists when
workers are unable to
control their immediate
work processes.
Robert Blauner
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