1
Strangleman T, Warren T. Work and society: sociological approaches, themes and methods. Abingdon: Routledge 2008.
2
Edgell S. The sociology of work: continuity and change in paid and unpaid work. London: Sage 2006.
3
Edgell S, Gottfried H, Granter E. The SAGE handbook of the sociology of work and employment. Los Angeles: SAGE Reference 2016.
4
British Sociological Association. Work, employment & society: a journal of the British Sociological Association.
5
Noon M, Blyton P, Morrell K. The realities of work: experiencing work and employment in contemporary society. 4th ed. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan 2013.
6
Grint K, Nixon D. The sociology of work. 4th ed. Cambridge: Polity 2015.
7
Watson TJ. Sociology, work and industry. 5th ed. Abingdon: Routledge 2008.
8
Pettinger L. A new sociology of work? Oxford: Blackwell 2005.
9
Grint K. Work and society: a reader. Cambridge: Polity Press 2000.
10
‘Visualising Changing Landscapes of Work and Labour’, SocResOnline, Vol. 17, Issue 2: Contents. http://www.socresonline.org.uk/17/2/contents.html
11
Dawn Lyon and Les Back: Fishmongers in a Global Economy.
12
Tim Strangleman: Picturing Work in an Industrial Landscape.
13
Harry Braverman, Braverman H. Labor and Monopoly Capitalism: the Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century.
14
Thompson P. The nature of work: an introduction to debates on the labour process. 2nd ed. Basingstoke: Macmillan Education 1989.
15
Korczynski et al. M. Service Work in Consumer Capitalism: Customers, Control and Contradictions.
16
Bayard de Volo L. Service and Surveillance: Infrapolitics at Work among Casino Cocktail Waitresses.
17
Warren T. Working part-time: achieving a successful ‘work-life’ balance?
18
Warren T. Work-time underemployment and financial hardship: class inequalities and recession in the UK. Work, employment and society. 2015;29:191–212. doi: 10.1177/0950017014559264
19
CB Luce CH. Extreme Jobs: The Dangerous Allure of the 70-Hour Workweek.
20
G Meacher. Is it wrong to pay for housework?
21
M Cole. Re-Thinking Unemployment: A Challenge to the Legacy of Jahoda et al.
22
Roderick M. A very precarious profession: Uncertainty in the working lives of professional footballers.
23
Roderick M, Schumacker J. ‘The whole week comes down to the team sheet’: a footballer’s view of insecure work. Work, employment and society. 2017;31:166–74. doi: 10.1177/0950017016672792
24
B Burchell. A Temporal Comparison of the Effects of Unemployment and Job Insecurity on Wellbeing.
25
Hochschild AR, ebrary, Inc. The managed heart: commercialization of human feeling. Updated, with a new preface. Berkeley: University of California Press 2012.
26
Williams CL, Connell C. ‘Looking Good and Sounding Right’: Aesthetic Labor and Social Inequality in the Retail Industry. Work and Occupations. 2010;37:349–77. doi: 10.1177/0730888410373744
27
Strangleman T. Work Identity in Crisis? Rethinking the Problem of Attachment and Loss at Work. Sociology. 2012;46:411–25. doi: 10.1177/0038038511422585
28
Doherty M. When the working day is through: the end of work as identity? Work, Employment & Society. 2009;23:84–101. doi: 10.1177/0950017008099779
29
Wajcman J. Automation: is it really different this time? The British Journal of Sociology. 2017;68:119–27. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12239
30
Warren T. Work-life balance/imbalance: the dominance of the middle class and the neglect of the working class. The British Journal of Sociology. 2015;66:691–717. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12160
31
DE STEFANO V. The rise of the «just-in-time workforce»: On-demand work, crowdwork and labour protection in the «gig-economy».