Will Kitchen was Teaching Fellow in Film Studies at the University of Southampton and Visiting Tutor at the Bournemouth Film School, Arts University Bournemouth, UK. He is the author and editor of several books on modern culture and critical theory, including Film, Negation and Freedom: Capitalism and Romantic Critique (Bloomsbury Academic, 2023), ReFocus: The Films of Lindsay Anderson (2025) and Romanticism and Film: Franz Liszt and Audio-Visual Explanation (Bloomsbury, 2020).
This is an exciting and wide-ranging illumination of work, capitalism and critique through reference to literature, film and television from across the last century and longer. It will make a positive contribution to understanding politics and everyday life in relation to modern media through topics from Romanticism to resentment. * Louis Bayman, Associate Professor, University of Southampton, UK * Ranging across a large and transmedial body of materials, Will Kitchen's book offers a much-needed reassessment of the centrality of work in the contemporary cultural imaginary. In doing so, this excellent book offers incisive readings of individual texts, films, and TV series. But most importantly, it explains why and how work matters (and is likely to continue to matter) to the way we make sense of ourselves and the world. * Benjamin Kohlmann, Professor of English Literature, University of Regensburg, Germany * We learn how to be a worker through TV, films and pop music. At the same time, much of popular culture contests the drabness of working lives with the carnival of musicals, cartoons and comedy. In this wide ranging and beautifully written book, Will Kitchen shows us how both of these truths are possible at the same time, and why we should never believe that culture is either ideology or resistance. You might never look at The Office in the same way again. * Martin Parker, Professor of Organization Studies, University of Bristol Business School, UK * This important book burns with a fearless gaze at the iron masks of work discipline into which we ourselves lock our grinning heads every day. Will Kitchen has previously made us think anew about film and music in elegantly argued prose. Culture, Capital and Carnival continues the elegant readability of his previous volumes but issues an even more vital challenge: to look again at our attitudes to work and leisure, wage slavery and funfair freedoms, and how the media, even at their most apparently subversive and comical, powerfully encourage us to accept if not love our iron masks. This is a disturbing, brilliant yet humane book that we all need to read. It reminds us of something we knew but dared not think, that we need to stop laughing at work, open our eyes, and dare to change. I only wish I had written it myself. * Andrew King, Professor, University of Greenwich, UK * Kitchen is one of the few scholars who combines lived experience with erudition, high with low culture, finely tuned analyses with broad brush overviews. If that wasn’t enough he writes beautifully, argues persuasively and happily takes the readers through centuries of intellectual history. Scholarly enquiry doesn’t get much better than that. * Anja Louis, Professor of Transnational Pop Culture, Sheffield Hallam University, UK * This interdisciplinary examination of how modern culture and media contextualises the values of labour navigates skilfully and critically the application of complex academic concepts to the context of cultural production and modern capitalism. It is a critical contribution that demonstrates knowledge in breadth and depth in a way that is accessible and valuable to a wide audience. * Doris Schedlitzki, Professor of Organizational Leadership, London Metropolitan University, UK *