¶ … Industrial Revolution heralded a shift in the way that goods were produced. Technological developments in particular began a shift in emphasis away from human capital towards financial capital. Human beings, once almost exclusively in one trade or another, became increasingly viewed as equivalent to machines, or worse. This marked a shift both in business and society with respect to the nature of work in society, a shift whose repercussions are still felt today. The Introduction section will highlight the background information -- defining the Industrial Revolution, the ways work was viewed in society prior to it and how work is viewed in society today, which will provide perspective of some of the critical changes that have occurred.
In his essay Why We Work, Andrew Curry outlines some of the more profound of these changes. These changes will form the basis of my research paper on how the Industrial Revolution affected the nature of work in society. Each change will be discussed in turn, tracing its evolution from concepts that emerged during the Industrial Revolution to modern day life. This will be the Discussion section, and it will form the bulk of the paper.
First, the structure of work itself will be discussed. Frederick Taylor and Henry Ford reframed the worker-work relationship on strictly economic terms. Taylor saw the worker as only useful for muscle; Ford knew workers would hate being on his assembly line and offered them extra pay to entice them. Psychologically, this shift had a profound impact on the role of work in society. Where once work and one's role were closely...
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