2015
DOI: 10.1093/jdh/epv012
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Making ‘Foreign Orders’: Australian Print-workers and Clandestine Creative Production in the 1980s

Abstract: A 'foreign order' is an Australian industrial colloquialism referring to a practice whereby workers produce objects at work-using factory materials and work timewithout authorization. This is an under-explored but global phenomenon with many names, including 'homers', 'side productions', 'government jobs' and la perruque. This article examines the unofficial creative activities of Australian print-workers through a case study of a Sydney printing factory in the 1980s, when the printing industry was rapidly com… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Port Kembla's repair and maintenance workers are historically generous within their community. They repair appliances, cars and other machinery for themselves and others, are assiduous sharers of tools, skills and excess materials, and motivated to live autonomously (Pickerill and Chatterton, 2006; Stein, 2015). Extensive fieldwork in suburban gardens and sheds revealed frequent expressions of autonomy including the work of food production, energy generation and water harvesting, often by fashioning non-proprietary solutions to household problems from discarded materials.…”
Section: Rethinking Materials Relations Through Industrial Maintenanc...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Port Kembla's repair and maintenance workers are historically generous within their community. They repair appliances, cars and other machinery for themselves and others, are assiduous sharers of tools, skills and excess materials, and motivated to live autonomously (Pickerill and Chatterton, 2006; Stein, 2015). Extensive fieldwork in suburban gardens and sheds revealed frequent expressions of autonomy including the work of food production, energy generation and water harvesting, often by fashioning non-proprietary solutions to household problems from discarded materials.…”
Section: Rethinking Materials Relations Through Industrial Maintenanc...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Central to expressions of autonomy around the home is the constant work of collecting. Steelworkers are highly attuned to the material abundance that surrounds them, and their collecting practices have historically crossed the boundaries of the workplace and the home in a range of tolerated (and occasionally officially condoned) practices of workplace thrift, known colloquially as 'foreign orders' (Anteby 2008;Adams Stein 2015). My interest is piqued one Saturday morning by a notice in the local paper, advertising a garage sale of old tools and machinery, described as 'ex-steelworks'.…”
Section: Repair Work: Negotiating Authority and Autonomymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While through the lenses of capital or collective labour, these activities become acts of resistance or struggle within the prevailing system (cf. Adams Stein 2015;Anteby 2008), when viewed from the household, they should be taken seriously and viewed as work. Though unpaid and often largely unsanctioned, such work has contributed substantially over time to the broader city where workers go about lives beyond the enterprise.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While often ignored as a "dying" group, waged labor makers still exist, even in the Global North (Gibson, Carr and Warren 2015). Some of these makers also exercise their skills and making activities outside of their contractual employment (Stein 2015;. Other makers tie their activities to a politics of resistance to corporate culture and exploitative manufacturing supply chains (Vanni 2015).…”
Section: Political Imaginary #1: Maker-as-entrepreneurmentioning
confidence: 99%