In this gripping ethnography, Jeffrey J. Sallaz goes behind the scenes of the global casino industry to investigate the radically different worlds of work and leisure he found in identically designed casinos in the United States and South Africa. Seamlessly weaving political and economic history with his own personal experience, Sallaz provides a riveting account of two years spent working among both countries' casino dealers, pit bosses, and politicians. While the popular imagination sees the Nevada casino as a hedonistic world of consumption, The Labor of Luck shows that the "Vegas experience" is made possible only through a variety of systems regulating labor, capital, and consumers, and that because of these complex dynamics, the Vegas casino cannot be seamlessly picked up and replicated elsewhere. Sallaz's fresh and path-breaking approach reveals how neo-liberal versus post-colonial forms of governance produce divergent worlds at the tables, and how politics, profits, and pleasure have come together to shape everyday life in the new economy.
Holiday Specials: Love, Labor, & Luck Collection
The Accidental Theorist and Other Dispatches from the Dismal Science. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. Kube, Sebastian, Michel André Maréchal, and Clemens Puppe. 2011. “The Currency of Reciprocity — Gift-Exchange in the Workplace.
Debunking current stereotypes of the homeless. Down on Their Luck sketches a portrait of men and women who are highly adaptive, resourceful, and pragmatic.
Hailed by The New York Review of Booksas "one of cultural history's masters of linking popular moods and ideas with arts, philosophies, industries, and commodities," prizewinning historian Jackson Lears has...
... FaChe, Chris Barbary, Gerald (Jerry) Belle, Darrell Billington, Kyle Blackmer, John M. Bremen, William P. Buchanan, Scott Calder, robin Capehart, Scott Cederberg, Brian Cornell, Lauren Cujé, Jeff Donnelly, todd Driver, David r.
In his 14th book, bestselling author Nicholas Sparks tells the unforgettable story of a man whose brushes with death lead him to the love of his life.
Longlisted for the 2014 National Book Award From the winner of the Pulitzer Prize: a powerful, engrossing new novel—the life and times of a remarkable family over three transformative decades in America.
By the author of the National Book Award finalist, Come to Me. 125,000 first printing.
Includes an excerpt from Luck of the draw by Kate Clayborn.
Legal gambling, once little more than a tourist attraction in New Jersey and Nevada, spread throughout the United States in the early 1990s and today generates over $35 billion in...