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The Abolition of Work

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1985 essay by Bob Black

This article is about the essay by Bob Black. For the concept, seeAbolition of work.
The Abolition of Work and Other Essays
AuthorBob Black
Cover artistDonna Kossy
LanguageEnglish
SubjectCritique of work
GenreSocial criticism
Published1986
PublisherLoompanics
Publication placeUnited States
ISBN0-915179-41-5
OCLC15135277

"The Abolition of Work" is an essay written by Bob Black in 1985. It was part of Black's first book, an anthology of essays entitledThe Abolition of Work and Other Essays published byLoompanics Unlimited.[1] It is an exposition of Black's "type 3anarchism" – a blend of post-Situationist theory andindividualist anarchism – focusing on acritique of the work ethic.[2]

Synopsis

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In the essay, Black advocates against work, and for play. He opens the essay with the sentence "No one should ever work". Black defines work as "compulsory production" enforced by "economic or political means", which he critizes both in capitalist and communist economic systems. Black does not argue for idleness, but for "a new way of life based on play".[1] According to him, work is the source of the misery in the world. He considers the modern American worker of his time as a "part-time slave", in a hierarchy comparable to a monastery or prison.

Black claims that work can largely be abolished, since most of it is useless except for those in power. According to him, the useful work that then remains after the abolition could be transformed into playing games, "indistinguishable from other pleasurable pastimes, except that they happen to yield useful end-products".

The essay is humoristic in tone and could be considered satirical, although Black writes that he is "both joking and serious". Reverend Ivan Stang writes in the foreword of the collection that Black wrote some of the "wittiest hate humor I'd ever seen". Black, for example, compares the modern American worker to the Cambodian genocide, writing: "People think the Cambodians were crazy for exterminating themselves, but are we any different?"

Black, pictured reading in 2011

Influence

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"The Abolition of Work" was a significant influence onfuturist and design criticBruce Sterling, who at the time was a leadingcyberpunk science fiction author and called it "one of the seminal underground documents of the 1980s".[3] The essay's critique of work formed the basis for the anti-labor faction in Sterling's 1988 novelIslands in the Net.[3]

The book has been cited and referred to during the anti-work movement of the 2020s, particularly active onReddit.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abBlack, Bob (1986).The Abolition of Work and Other Essays. Port Townsend: Loompanics Unlimited.ISBN 0-915179-41-5.
  2. ^Porton, Richard (1999).Film and the Anarchist Imagination. London: Verso. pp. 166–172.ISBN 1-85984-261-5.
  3. ^abMcCaffery, Larry (1991). "Bruce Sterling".Across the Wounded Galaxies. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 217.ISBN 0-252-06140-3.
  4. ^Kaori Gurley, Lauren (November 10, 2021)."Reddit's Million-Strong Antiwork Community Wants to Blackout Black Friday".Vice. RetrievedJune 8, 2025.

Further reading

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External links

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External audio
audio iconThe Abolition of Work, a free mp3 recording from the Audio Anarchy project. Part of theAnti-Work Essays series.
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