In Songs of the Factory, Marek Korczynski examines the role that
popular music plays in workers' culture on the factory floor.
Reporting on his ethnographic fieldwork in a British factory that
manufactures window blinds, Korczynski shows how workers make
often-grueling assembly-line work tolerable by permeating their
workday with pop music on the radio. The first ethnographic study
of musical culture in an industrial workplace, Songs of the Factory
draws on socio-musicology, cultural studies, and sociology of work,
combining theoretical development, methodological innovation, and a
vitality that brings the musical culture of the factory workers to
life.
Music, Korczynski argues, allows workers both to fulfill their
social roles in a regimented industrial environment and to express
a sense of resistance to this social order. The author highlights
the extensive forms of informal collective resistance within this
factory, and argues that the musically informed culture played a
key role in sustaining these collective acts of resistance. As well
as providing a rich picture of the musical culture and associated
forms of resistance in the factory, Korczynski also puts forward
new theoretical concepts that have currency in other workplaces and
in other rationalized spheres of society.
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