Abstract
This article uncovers an underexplored phenomenon observed in managerial – employee exchanges within the service sector: emotional exploitation. Drawing on ethnographic insights from the public house industry, it explores how managers deploy emotion-inducing tactics to seduce lower-echelon workers into accepting unfavourable working conditions. Crucially, such consent is not always manufactured by management; processes of self-seduction - where workers consent through self-persuasion – also play a central role. Emotional exploitation, this paper argues, is a routine feature of pub work, shaped by fluctuating emotional intensities, surplus or shortages of staff, and the affective pull of collegial relationships. It further examines how low-paid workers both heed and resist the mechanisms of (self-)seduction. In doing so, it extends analysis of emotional labour within labour control strategies, adds to the theory of manufacturing consent, and deepens the understanding of the commodification of emotion under capitalism – highlighting how (self-)seduction further alienates workers from aspects of the self.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 257 - 276 |
| Number of pages | 20 |
| Journal | Labour and Industry: a journal of the social and economic relations of work |
| Volume | 35 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 22 Aug 2025 |
Keywords
- consent
- control
- emotional exploitation
- emotional labour
- resistance
- seduction