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How a Soviet miner from the 1930s helped create today’s intense corporate workplace culture

24m · In Depth, Out Loud · 30 Jun 11:16

This episode of The Conversation’s In Depth Out Loud podcast features the story of a young Soviet miner named Alexei Stakhanov, and how the work ethic he embodied in the 1930s has been invoked by managers in the west ever since.

Stakhanov’s staggering workload and personal commitment to his job as a miner in Stalin’s Soviet Union became the embodiment of a new human type and the beginning of a new social and political trend known as “Stakhanovism”. Bogdan Costea, professor of management and society at Lancaster University, and Peter Watt, international lecturer in management and organisation studies at Lancaster University in Leipzig, argue that the spectre of this long-forgotten Soviet miner still haunts our workplace culture today.

You can read the text version of this in-depth article here. The audio version is read by Les Smith in partnership with Noa, News Over Audio. You can listen to more articles from The Conversation, for free, on the Noa app.

The music in In Depth Out Loud is Night Caves, by Lee Rosevere. In Depth Out Loud is produced by Gemma Ware.

This story came out of a project at The Conversation called Insights supported by Research England. You can read more stories in the series here.

The Conversation is a charity. If you're able to support what we do, please consider donating here. Thank you.


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The episode How a Soviet miner from the 1930s helped create today’s intense corporate workplace culture from the podcast In Depth, Out Loud has a duration of 24:14. It was first published 30 Jun 11:16. The cover art and the content belong to their respective owners.

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