Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 282
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-0975-7 • Hardback • August 2001 • $30.95 • (£25.00)
978-0-7425-6026-0 • Paperback • November 2007 • $21.95 • (£16.99)
The Nation has described Stanley Aronowitz as 'a larger-than-life' figure who has vigorously defended American labor through his public speeches, organizing, and academic writings. He lives in Manhattan, where he is distinguished professor of sociology and cultural studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
Part 1 Accelerated Lives
Chapter 2 No Time for Democracy? Time, Space, and Social Change
Chapter 3 The Last Good Job in America
Chapter 4 The End of Bohemia
Part 5 Education and Democracy
Chapter 6 Thinking Beyond "School Failure:" Freire's Legacy
Chapter 7 Violence and the Myth of Democracy
Chapter 8 Higher Education as a Public Good
Chapter 9 Education for Citizenship: Gramsci's "Common School" today
Part 10 Culture, Identity, and Democracy
Chapter 11 The Double Bind of Race
Chapter 12 Race Relations in the Twenty-First Century
Chapter 13 Between Nationality and Class
Part 14 Changing Theories of the State
Chapter 15 Globalization and the State
Chapter 16 Capitalism and the State: Marcuse's Legacy
Chapter 17 Onto-history and Epistemology
Part 18 Jobs in a Globalized Technoculture
Chapter 19 On Union Democracy
Chapter 20 Unions as a Public Sphere
Chapter 21 "New Men of Power:" The Lost Legacy of C. Wright Mills
The Last Good Job in America provides a wake up call for those who believe that class is either an outdated category or who want to define it through the narrow prism of rigid orthodoxies. Stanley Aronowitz both rescues class from these pitfalls and offers one of the most expansive, insightful, and complex renderings of its significance for rethinking the meaning of a revitalized democracy. Not only does Aronowitz engage the history of class as a conceptual and political category, he also constructs a brilliant analysis of how class is lived through a wide range of social relations and institutions. This is a profoundly important book that offers a new language and interdisciplinary approach to appropriating class as part of a wider effort to challenge the so called irreversible logic of global capitalism while reclaiming the promise of democracy as a site of struggle and possibility.
— Henry A. Giroux, McMaster University Chair for Scholarship in the Public Interest
Even those of us who do not think of Aronowitz as one of our own, however, have much to learn from books like The Last Good Job in America. The book covers an astonishingly broad territory. Aronowitz's pessimism is pervasive, brilliantly articulated, and anything but vague.
— Industrial and Labor Relations Review
This book makes a clearly defined contribution...
— Contemporary Sociology
The recognition that contemporary neo-liberal technoculture is beset with a plethora of severe social, economic, and moral problems is, in itself, no profound revelation. In The Last Good Job in America, however, Stanley Aronowitz addresses these issues with extraordinary urgency, clarity, and intellectual depth. For those holding a somewhat different vision of social utopia from that propelling neo-liberal technoculture, then, this veritable tour-de-force offers significant hope, moral inspiration, and political encouragement. Indeed, The Last Good Job in America affords labor and academics with a strategic blueprint to create a more equitable and just society.
— Journal Of Educational Thought(Jet)
A hearty omnivore of knowledge, Aronowitz can barely be matched in the craft of opinion-making. In these essays he is at his very best, offering a range of political commentary that gives you the big picture without sacrificing analytic detail.
— Andrew Ross, Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis, New York University, USA; author of Nice Work If You Can Get It: Life and Labor in Precarious Times