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The Call Centre and its Many PlayersInstructional and Performance Technology Department and Sociology Department, Boise State University, ID, USA, dwiniecki{at}boisestate.edu Call centres have been presented as a poster child for many things ranging from a leap in management success, to a locale of total panoptic power, to electronic sweatshops, to the latest effort in deskilling physical and emotional labour for corporate profit, to an outpost of corporate empire. Proponents of these positions frame their assertions with theoretical positions that advance particular views of either nature or society as the commonsensically-present active ingredient behind the forces at play. Aided by actor-network theory, this article attempts to avoid these theoretically-constructed positions to describe how some of the many and varied actors (both human and non-human) contribute to the day-to-day production of call centres and call centre work in and of themselves. Through this analysis, the article demonstrates how artefacts produced in the field itself both help and enable self-discipline of the living in an ongoing reflective accomplishment of order.
Key Words: actor-network theory (ANT) call centres discipline evaluation measurement nature society technology-mediated tertiary labour
Organization, Vol. 16, No. 5,
705-731 (2009) |
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