The Ends of the Office: A Critique of the "White-Collar" Workplace

Item

Title
The Ends of the Office: A Critique of the "White-Collar" Workplace
Description
Although it is arguably the primary engine of capitalist urbanization, the modern office has largely avoided critical scrutiny as a physical site of labor. In this thesis, I explore the geohistorical developments that have led to the establishment of the office as a fundamental fixture of the American landscape in order to situate it within the neoliberal capitalist regime. I hold that the office is (and has been) incompatible with the requirements of accumulation and instead primarily serves an ideological function as an embodiment of inherited power dynamics. These conditions have left the office at risk of a restructuring, similar to what was seen with the American factory and deindustrialization, but along digital, rather than territorial lines. As such, the office stands at a crossroads between a continuation of the status quo of subjugation or a more pervasive form of exploitation, with implications that extend far beyond the cubicle.
Creator
Cohen, Kyle
Subject
Urban planning
Economic history
Geography
Contributor
Forsyth, Ann
Carvalho, Bruno
Date
2021-05-21T14:00:47Z
2021
2021-05-19
2021-05
2021-05-21T14:00:47Z
Type
Thesis or Dissertation
text
Format
application/pdf
application/pdf
Identifier
Cohen, Kyle. 2021. The Ends of the Office: A Critique of the "White-Collar" Workplace. Master's thesis, Harvard Graduate School of Design.
28541592
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37367649
0000-0002-1092-5432
Language
en