成为你自己的设备:工作场所的自我跟踪挑战

IF 1.3 4区 社会学 Q3 SOCIOLOGY
S. Richardson, D. Mackinnon
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引用次数: 9

摘要

长期以来,工作场所一直寻求通过监控和跟踪各种指标来提高员工的生产力和绩效。这些努力越来越多地以员工的健康和福祉为目标——认识到健康和积极的员工是有生产力的。受个性化和参与式医疗管理趋势的影响(Swan 2012),一些工作场所已经开始试行自己的计划,利用健身可穿戴设备和个人分析来减少久坐的生活方式。这些项目通常采取游戏化的自我追踪挑战的形式,结合合作、竞争和筹款,激励参与者行动起来。虽然似乎在生物政治的箭袋中提供了新的箭头——即保持员工自律、活跃、健康和盈利的工具(Lupton 2012)——但也有一定程度的接受和参与。尽管参与者是由自我跟踪技术塑造的,但“他们也反过来由自己的想法和实践塑造他们”(Ruckenstein 2014:70)。在本文中,我们认为,与其仅仅通过权力或赋权的话语来看待自我追踪挑战,更紧迫的问题是“我们与追踪活动的关系是如何在习惯、文化规范、物质条件和意识形态约束的范围内形成的”(Van Den Eede 2015:157)。我们通过对加拿大两所大学教职员工自我跟踪挑战的实证案例研究来应对这些紧张局势。通过减少炒作,本文揭示了自动跟踪器是如何成为(而不仅仅是)自己的设备的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Becoming Your Own Device: Self-Tracking Challenges In The Workplace
Workplaces have long sought to improve employee productivity and performance by monitoring and tracking a variety of indicators. Increasingly, these efforts target the health and wellbeing of the employee – recognizing that a healthy and active worker is a productive one. Influenced by managerial trends in personalized and participatory medicine (Swan 2012), some workplaces have begun to pilot their own programs, utilizing fitness wearables and personal analytics to reduce sedentary lifestyles. These programs typically take the form of gamified self-tracking challenges combining cooperation, competition, and fundraising to incentivize participants to get moving. While seemingly providing new arrows in the bio-political quiver – that is, tools to keep employees disciplined yet active, healthy yet profitable (Lupton 2012) – there is also a certain degree of acceptance and participation. Although participants are shaped by self-tracking technologies, “they also, in turn, shape them by their own ideas and practices” (Ruckenstein 2014: 70). In this paper, we argue that instead of viewing self-tracking challenges solely through discourses of power or empowerment, the more pressing question concerns “how our relationship to our tracking activities takes shape within a constellation of habits, cultural norms, material conditions, ideological constraints” (Van Den Eede 2015: 157). We confront these tensions through an empiric case study of self-tracking challenges for staff and faculty at two Canadian universities. By cutting through the hype, this paper uncovers how self-trackers are becoming (and not just left to) their own devices.
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