Community and Occupation
This book is concerned with the relationship between a man's work and his leisure time, in its broadest sense. At the opposite extreme to the 'instrumental' attitude, where the worker keeps his work and leisure time completely separate, is the close involvement in work and the correspondingly close relationship between working and non-working identities characteristic of 'occupational communities'. This 1974 book attempts to define the concept. After a survey of the theoretical background, Dr. Salaman presents a model of what an occupational community is and the reasons for its existence. The following chapters consist of empirical discussions on some specific examples. There is a detailed comparison between Cambridge railwaymen and architects. Dr Salaman draws the conclusion that occupational communities may be of two sorts - one based on the occupation as a whole, the other on a particular local workplace - and this distinction has considerable implications for the sociology of work.
Product details
June 1974Paperback
9780521098526
146 pages
216 × 140 × 9 mm
0.2kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: some themes and issues from the classics: the theoretical background
- 2. The components and determinants of occupational communities
- 3. A review of some accounts of some accounts of occupational communities
- 4. The determinants of the occupational communities of architects and railwaymen
- 5. The occupational communities of architects and railwaymen
- 6. Conclusions and summary
- Bibliography
- Index.