Event

Holding labor to ac(count): quiet quitting and the limits of the anti-work imaginary

  • Wed 3 Jun 26

    14:00 - 15:00

  • Online

    Zoom

  • Event speaker

    Abe Walker, Fayetteville State University

  • Event type

    Lectures, talks and seminars

  • Event organiser

    Centre for Commons Organising Values Equalities and Resilience

  • Contact details

    COVER Research Centre

This seminar addresses debates over the emancipatory potential of counter-accounting by asking whether the co-optation of oppositional accounts signifies success or failure. It charts the inter- play between official accounts and counter-accounts through a historical analysis of four waves of anti-work struggle, showing how activists alternately challenged – and failed to challenge – the dominant work ethic.

It is found that partisans of antiwork consistently drew on problematic accounts, leaving them vulnerable to recuperation, reintegration, and, eventually, defeat. By adopting the official accounting apparatus of dominant institutions, these counter-accounts inherited the ideological biases of the truth regimes they sought to dismantle. Counter- accounts cohere and become intelligible only by indexing themselves to the prevailing order. Accounting practices that repurpose existing data for alternative ends will likely bear the imprint of the truth regimes that created them, leaving them open to co-optation.

The analysis concludes by invoking the contemporary phenomenon of quiet quitting, highlighting both its resonances with earlier phases of struggle and its departures from past precedent. By withholding voice and withdrawing from the productivist mandate, quiet quitting points toward a latent strategy of refusal that resists the imperative to be made legible to the accounting gaze, thereby offering a potential path beyond the traps of counter-accounting.

Speaker

Abe Walker is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at Fayettesville State University. His research combines insights from industrial relations, cultural studies, and social theory to analyze struggles over work and labor. His book, Reassembling the UAW: Insurgency, Contention and the Struggle for Unionism in the American South, draws on a decade of fieldwork to explain the challenges of new union organizing in the automotive industry.

His work centers on questions of labor power and organization amid economic restructuring, climate crisis, and geopolitical turmoil. He is also currently a Visiting Research Fellow at ChainGE Lab (Labor Law for a Global Value Chain Economy), a project of the European Research Council, exploring how workers are asserting their collective power across scales and strategically exploiting structural vulnerabilities within global production networks.