Shop Class as Soulcraft by Matthew B. Crawford: Book Cover

    Shop Class as Soulcraft: An Inquiry into the Value of Work by Matthew B. Crawford

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    (Hardcover)

    • Pub. Date: May 2009
    • 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 1,432
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: May 2009
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
      • Format: Hardcover, 256pp
      • Sales Rank: 1,432

      The Barnes & Noble Review

      When the battery came a cropper a few months after I purchased my first iPod, I was shocked to learn that there was nothing to be done. It's one of our era's familiar sensations. This sleek technological confection, like so many others, seems meant to be sucked dry of its juices and then discarded -- only the latest and most flagrant iteration of the disposability that seems to be the telos of our tools. Unwilling to accept this fate (and too broke to spring for a new iPod), I went a-Googling for solutions. And I met another sensation familiar in these days: the welcome discovery that a hack exists. A mouse-click or two and a few days later a replacement battery had arrived, packaged with two plastic, vaguely dental tools designed to unstitch iPod's seemingly seamless case. Painstakingly, clumsily, I applied the tools -- and like a rip in the tissue of existence, the impregnable case cracked open to reveal the iPod's tawdry innards, all microprinted serial numbers and vermiform wires. In so doing I had reconnected with our species' ancient ways, our own tool-making, world-altering habitus; I had also voided my warranty.

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      Synopsis

      A philosopher / mechanic destroys the pretensions of the high- prestige workplace and makes an irresistible case for working with one's hands

      Shop Class as Soulcraft brings alive an experience that was once quite common, but now seems to be receding from society-the experience of making and fixing things with our hands. Those of us who sit in an office often feel a lack of connection to the material world, a sense of loss, and find it difficult to say exactly what we do all day. For anyone who felt hustled off to college, then to the cubicle, against their own inclinations and natural bents, Shop Class as Soulcraft seeks to restore the honor of the manual trades as a life worth choosing.

      On both economic and psychological grounds, Crawford questions the educational imperative of turning everyone into a "knowledge worker," based on a misguided separation of thinking from doing, the work of the hand from that of the mind. Crawford shows us how such a partition, which began a century ago with the assembly line, degrades work for those on both sides of the divide.

      But Crawford offers good news as well: the manual trades are very different from the assembly line, and from dumbed-down white collar work as well. They require careful thinking and are punctuated by moments of genuine pleasure. Based on his own experience as an electrician and mechanic, Crawford makes a case for the intrinsic satisfactions and cognitive challenges of manual work. The work of builders and mechanics is secure; it cannot be outsourced, and it cannot be made obsolete. Such work ties us to the local communities in which we live, and instills the pride that comes fromdoing work that is genuinely useful. A wholly original debut, Shop Class as Soulcraft offers a passionate call for self-reliance and a moving reflection on how we can live concretely in an ever more abstract world.

      The New York Times - Francis Fukuyama

      Shop Class as Soulcraft is a beautiful little book about human excellence and the way it is undervalued in contemporary America.

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      Biography

      MATTHEW B. CRAWFORD is a philosopher and mechanic. He has a Ph.D. in political philosophy from the University of Chicago and served as a postdoctoral fellow on its Committee on Social Thought. Currently a fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia, he owns and operates Shockoe Moto, an independent motorcycle repair shop in Richmond, VA.

      Customer Reviews

      • Reader Rating:
      • Ratings: 13Reviews: 2

      An important book--one to make you think about where we're going and what we're doingby wordherder62

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      September 05, 2009: Crawford writes a compelling and though-provoking book in Shop Class as Soulcraft. It is one of the best things I've read in a long time in terms of turning the way we think on its head. Everyday I wonder about the life we are preparing our children for as I'm the father of three and I think the notion of creating a nation of cubicle prisoners is as bad as anything the industrial age ever presented. And these jobs are not good jobs as our political leadership wants us to believe. They are jobs that condemn to a lifetime of two-percent raises for corporations that make ever higher profits producing nothing but money from money.

      Crawford's book is well written, though at times he does show off all that education a bit too much by writing in a way that could be simplified. But it is all part of his voice and he seems to balance it out with some occasional use of profanity, particularly the ever-familiar Anglo-Saxon for copulate. But it fits the style of who he is and the message.

      I would like to have seem more than a few pages at the end of the book devoted to the prescriptive. He's got the cred to do so and should have given us more depth and detail on the ideas he has for making things better. An important book and one that more should read than will.

      Best Non-Fiction I've purchased in a long time!by helenadendritis

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      August 16, 2009: If you've been working in an office environment, or ever have, and you could never quite put your finger on why your work, your job, and the work environment, just weren't satisfying (or worse, were downright infuriating), you MUST read this book! His insights into the degradation of "knowledge work" really helped to put my frustrations and dissatisfaction into perspective. There's a lot of comfort in knowing that it really isn't "just me," that there is something fundamentally wrong with American "work."