AlbinPeterEileenApplebaum, 1988. “The Computer-Rationalization of Work” In JaneJensonElisabethHagenCeallaighReddy (eds.), Feminization of the Labor Force: Paradoxes and PromisesOxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
2.
ApplebaumEileen1987. “Restructuring Work: Temporary, Part-Time, and At-Home Employment” In HeidiI. Hartmann (ed.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 2. Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
3.
BaranBarbara1987. “The Technological Transformation of White-Collar Work: A Case Study of the Insurance Industry” In HeidiI. Hartmann (ed.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 2Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
4.
BarkerJaneHazelDowning1980. “Word Processing and the Transformation of the Patriarchal Relations of Production.”Capital and Class. 10: 64–99.
5.
BellDaniel1973. The Coming of Post-Industrial SocietyNew York: Basic Books.
6.
BelousRichard1989. “How Human Resource Systems Adjust to the Shift Toward Contingent Workers.”Monthly Labor Review March, pp. 8–12.
7.
BestFred1980. Breaking the Education-Work-Retirement LockstepNew York: Praeger.
8.
BravermanHarry1974. Labor and Monopoly Capitalism: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth CenturyNew York: Monthly Review Press.
9.
BronsteinA. S.1991. “Temporary Work in Western Europe: Threat or Complement to Permanent Employment?”International Labour Review. 130: 30: 291–310.
10.
BurrisBeverly H.1983. No Room at the Top: Underemployment and Alienation in the CorporationNew York: Praeger.
11.
CareyMax L.KimHazelbaker1986. “Employment Growth in the Temporary Help Industry.”Monthly Labor Review April, pp. 37–44.
12.
CarterValerie J.1987. “Office Technology and Relations of Control in Clerical Work Organization” In Wright (eds.), Women, Work, and Technology: TransformationsAnn Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
13.
CostelloCynthia1991. We're Worth It: Women and Collective Action in the Insurance WorkplaceUrbana and Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
14.
CreightonHannah1982. “Tied by Double Apron Strings: Female Work Culture and Organization in a Restaurant.”Insurgent Sociologist. 11: 3: 59–64.
15.
CromptonRosemaryGarethJones1984. White Collar Proletariat: Gender and Deskilling in Clerical WorkPhiladelphia: Temple University Press.
16.
CrozierMichel1971. The World of the White Collar WorkerChicago: University of Chicago Press.
17.
CuvillierRolande1984. The Reduction of Working TimeGeneva: International Labour Office.
18.
DaviesMargery1982. A Woman's Place Is at the Typewriter: Office Work and Office Workers 1870–1930Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
19.
Davis-BlakeAlisonBrianUzzi1993. “Determinants of Employment Externalization: A Study of Temporary Workers and Independent Contractors.”Administrative Science Quarterly. 38: 195–223.
20.
De KadtMaarten1979. “Insurance: A Clerical Work Factory” In AndrewZimbalist (ed.), Case Studies in the Labor ProcessNew York: Monthly Review Press.
21.
EdwardsRichard1979. Contested Terrain: The Transformation of the Workplace in the Twentieth CenturyNew York: Basic Books.
22.
FeldbergRoslyn L.Evelyn-NakanoGlenn1983. “Technology and Work Degradation: Effects of Office Automation on Women Clerical Workers” In JoanRothschild (ed.), Machina Ex Dea: Feminist Perspectives on TechnologyNew York: Pergamon Press.
23.
GhidinaMarcia J.1992. “Social Relations and the Definition of Work: Identity Management in a Low-Status Occupation.”Qualitative Sociology. 15: 1: 73–85.
24.
GlennEvelyn NakanoRoslynL. Feldberg1979. “Proletarianizing Clerical Work: Technology and Organizational Control in the Office” In AndrewZimbalist (ed.), Case Studies in the Labor ProcessNew York: Monthly Review Press.
25.
1982. “Degraded and Deskilled: The Proletarianization of Clerical Work” In AchelKahn HutArlene-KaplanDanielsRichardColvard (eds.), Women and Work: Problems and PerspectivesNew York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
26.
GoldinClaudia1987. “Women's Employment and Technological Change: A Historical Perspective” In HeidiI. Hartmann (ed.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 2Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
27.
GorzAndre1982. Farewell to the Working ClassBoston: South End Press.
28.
GorzAndre1985. Paths to Paradise: On the Liberation from WorkBoston: South End Press.
29.
HarrisonBennett1994. Lean and Mean: The Changing Landscape of Corporate Power in the Age of FlexibilityNew York: Basic Books.
30.
HartmannHeidi I.RobertE. KrautLouiseA. Tilly (eds.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 1Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
31.
HensonKevin1996. Just a TempPhiladelphia: Temple University Press.
32.
HoweWayne J.1986. “Temporary Help Workers: Who They Are, What Jobs They Hold.”Monthly Labor Review November, pp. 45–47.
33.
HuntH. AllanTimothyL. Hunt1987. “Recent Trends in Clerical Employment: The Impact of Technological Change” In HeidiI. Hartmann (ed.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 2Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
34.
KanterRosabeth Moss1977. Men and Women of the CorporationNew York: Basic Books, Inc.
35.
KingMary C.1993. “Black Women's Breakthrough into Clerical Work: An Occupational Tipping Model.”Journal of Economic Issues. 27: 4: 1097–1125.
36.
LeidnerRobin1993. Fast Food, Fast Talk: Service Work and the Routinization of Everyday LifeBerkeley: University of California Press.
37.
LockwoodDavid1958. The Blackcoated WorkerLondon: Allen and Unwin.
38.
LoweGraham S.1987. Women in the Administrative Revolution: The Feminization of Clerical WorkCambridge: Polity Press.
39.
MarxKarl1964. “Alienated Labour” In BottomoreT. B. (ed.), Karl Marx: Early WritingsNew York: McGraw-Hill.
40.
McGaugheyWilliam1981. A Shorter Work Week in the 1980sWhite Bear Lake, Minnesota: Thistlerose Publications.
41.
MenziesHeather1981. Women and The Chip: Case Studies of the Effects of Informatics on Employment in Canada Montreal The Institute for Humanity & Society, Volume 20, Number 2, May 199 Research on Public Policy.
42.
MillsC. Wright1951. White CollarLondon, Oxford, New York: Oxford University. Press.
43.
MurpheeMary C.1987. “New Technology and Office Tradition: The Not-So-Changing World of the Secretary” In HeidiI. Hartmann (ed.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 2Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
44.
NegreyCynthia1990. “Contingent Work and the Rhetoric of Autonomy.”Humanity and Society. 14: 1: 16–33.
45.
PaulesGreta Foff1991. Dishing It Out: Power and Resistance Among Waitresses in a New Jersey RestaurantPhiladelphia: Temple University Press.
46.
PoulantzasNicos1974. Classes in Contemporary CapitalismLondon: Verso.
47.
RitzerGeorge1977. Working: Conflict and ChangeEnglewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
48.
RitzerGeorge1996. The McDonaldization of SocietyThousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press.
49.
SewellGrahamBarryWilkinson1992. “‘Someone to Watch Over Me’: Surveillance, Discipline and the Just-in-Time Labour Process.”Sociology. 26: 2: 271–289.
50.
SmithMichael R.1989. Technologizing Office Work. Society May June, pp. 65–72.
51.
StroberMyra H.CarolynL. Arnold1987. “Integrated Circuits/Segregated Labor: Women in Computer Related Occupations and High-Tech Industries” In HeidiI. Hartmann (ed.), Computer Chips and Paper Clips: Technology and Women's Employment, Volume 2Washington, D. C.: National Academy Press.
52.
VallasSteven P.1987. “White Collar Proletarians?: The Structure of Clerical Work and Levels of Class Consciousness.”Sociological Quarterly. 28: 4: 523–540.
53.
WeberMax1970. From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology. GerthH. H.MillsC. Wright (eds.). London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, Ltd.
54.
WebsterFrankKevinRobins1993. “I'll Be Watching You: Comment on Sewell and Wilkinson.”Sociology. 27: 2: 243–252.
55.
WernekeDianeMicroelectronics and Office Jobs: The Impact of the Chip on Women's EmploymentGeneva: International Labour Office.