The Next Shift, Gabriel Winant
The Next Shift, Gabriel Winant
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The Next Shift
The Fall of Industry and the Rise of Health Care in Rust Belt America

Author: Gabriel Winant

Narrator: BJ Harrison

Unabridged: 13 hr 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/22/2021


Synopsis

Pittsburgh was once synonymous with steel. But today most of its mills are gone. Like so many places across the United States, a city that was a center of blue-collar manufacturing is now dominated by the service economy—particularly health care, which employs more Americans than any other industry. Gabriel Winant takes us inside the Rust Belt to show how America's cities have weathered new economic realities. In Pittsburgh's neighborhoods, he finds that a new working class has emerged in the wake of deindustrialization.

As steelworkers and their families grew older, they required more health care. Even as the industrial economy contracted sharply, the care economy thrived. Unlike their blue-collar predecessors, home health aides and hospital staff work unpredictable hours for low pay. And the new working class disproportionately comprises women and people of color.

Today health care workers are on the front lines of our most pressing crises, yet we have been slow to appreciate that they are the face of our twenty-first-century workforce. The Next Shift offers unique insights into how we got here and what could happen next. If health care employees, along with other essential workers, can translate the increasing recognition of their economic value into political power, they may become a major force in the twenty-first century.

About Gabriel Winant

Gabriel Winant is assistant professor of history at the University of Chicago. His writing about work, inequality, and capitalism in modern America has appeared in The Nation, the New Republic, Dissent, and n+1.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Durakov on November 28, 2022

One of my top books of the year, and for sure my favorite in political economy. A shining example of how to write about huge economic shifts while staying close to the ground, in the factory, in the home, on the street, in the hospital, and so on. I write about and work in health care, and this book......more

Goodreads review by Vincent on August 03, 2021

This is a great book. Winant's ability to trace Pittsburgh's history from the 50's to the 90's, and connect the relationship of labor between different industries is brilliant. This is really the crux of what makes the book so good. Winant consistently does an excellent job of analyzing the relation......more

Goodreads review by Moreen on April 20, 2023

As a Pittsburgher born into a former steel-industry family, it was amazing getting to witness the ways in which the patterns Winant identified mapped directly onto my family’s history. From displacement from the former manufacturing industry/industries into low-waged “unskilled” labor that inscribed......more

Goodreads review by Marks54 on June 28, 2021

There is a significant part of the health care work force that is low paid, poorly treated, and precarious in its status and stability as a source of work upon which workers can build their lives. If you examine this work force in more detail, it will also be clear that its marginal precarious statu......more

Goodreads review by Amy on December 17, 2021

I took a while to read this one, and stopped for a long time in the middle because it was so dense. That being said, it’s really well researched and makes incisive points about labor and inequality in tracing the decline of the steel industry and the rise of the healthcare industry in Pittsburgh/it’......more