Litcius/Paper detail

"A Reasonable Life"

Rosemary Steup, Paige White, Lynn Dombrowski, Norman Makoto Su

2022Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10 citationsDOI

Abstract

Past CSCW work has examined the role of temporal rhythms in cooperative work and has identified alignment work--the work required to bring dissonant rhythms into alignment--as an important aspect of large-scale collaboration. We ask instead how individual workers interact with temporal rhythms to sustain the conditions that make their work possible--not aligning rhythms, but attuning them. This paper draws on interviews with farmer-knowledge workers, people who engage with both farm work (the work of growing food or raising animals for food, on a commercial or non-commercial basis) and computer-based knowledge work. We identify three ways that farmer-knowledge workers interact with natural and structural rhythms to construct sustainable work-lives: anchoring (tying oneself to a particular rhythm to create accountability and structure), decoupling (loosening or cutting ties with a rhythm to create flexibility), and gap-filling (interweaving complementary rhythms to create balance). Together, these practices constitute attunement work.

Topics & Concepts

Work (physics)RhythmWork–life balanceAccountabilityTyingPublic relationsComputer scienceEngineeringPolitical scienceMechanical engineeringLawPhilosophyOperating systemAestheticsInnovative Human-Technology InteractionService and Product InnovationInformation Systems Theories and Implementation
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