An Ethnography of Work, Unemployment and Precariousness in Contemporary Greece
274 pages
10 hours of reading
Focusing on the experience of work in modern Greece, the book delves into employment insecurity and the impact of a welfare state crisis amidst high unemployment. It offers a theoretical and anthropological perspective, challenging traditional views of work as merely economic. By presenting a comparative analysis, it examines work as a social phenomenon, exploring themes of transformation, meaning, and narrative. The insights are supported by original empirical research, linking the nature of work to broader social policies and political decision-making processes.