2003
DOI: 10.1177/0170840603249008
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‘Subterranean Worksick Blues’: Humour as Subversion in Two Call Centres

Abstract: This article engages in debates stimulated by previous work published in Organization Studies, and more widely, on the purpose and effects of workers' humour and joking practices. The authors emphasize the subversive character of humour in the workplace, rejecting perspectives which see humour as inevitably contributing to organizational harmony. Drawing on methodologies, including ethnography, which permitted the authors to penetrate the organizational surface of two call centres, rich evidence of satire and … Show more

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Cited by 207 publications
(241 citation statements)
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References 20 publications
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“…In the field of employment, serious concerns have been expressed about the effects of offshoring on work in both home and host environments (Robert-Nicoud, 2008). The potential for 'backlash' in the West has been flagged by Taylor and Bain (2003) who noted campaigns in the UK to prevent the transfer of call centre jobs from the United Kingdom to India. The aspiration of policy makers in Europe, encapsulated in the Sapir Report (Year?…”
Section: Policy Related Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the field of employment, serious concerns have been expressed about the effects of offshoring on work in both home and host environments (Robert-Nicoud, 2008). The potential for 'backlash' in the West has been flagged by Taylor and Bain (2003) who noted campaigns in the UK to prevent the transfer of call centre jobs from the United Kingdom to India. The aspiration of policy makers in Europe, encapsulated in the Sapir Report (Year?…”
Section: Policy Related Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet in reality workers in front line roles may carve out spaces of freedom, misbehaviour and resistance. Engaging genuinely with those they come into contact with, joining with colleagues and customers to mock official systems and scripts or simply going through the motions of whatever acts are required for the sake of the pay packet (Bolton 2005a;Taylor and Bain 2003;Weeks 2004;Hochschild 1983). …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The culmination of discipline and punishment according to Foucault is the Panopticon, the process of surveillance and the internalisation of discipline. Although some scholars argue that the panoptic metaphor has been over-used (Ball and Wilson, 2000;Taylor and Bain, 2003;Thompson, 2003), it remains a useful concept to investigate processes of power and control in the education sector (e.g. Selwyn, 2000;Bushnell, 2003;Piro, 2008).…”
Section: External Accountabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%