'Manual labour' (or 'manual labor') is physical work done with the hands, especially in an unskilled
job such as fruit and vegetable picking, road building, or any other field where the work may be considered physically arduous, and which has as a profitable objective, usually the production of
goods.
In ancient times the status of manual labourers was low, as most physical tasks were done by
slaves. Legal scholar L. Ali Khan analyzes how the Greeks, Hindus, the English, and the Americans created sophisticated social structures to outsource manual labor to distinct classes, castes, and races.
[1] This continued into the
feudal period. This modest position is still reflected in such professional designations as ranch hand or stage hand, where 'hand' (a pars pro toto for pair of hands, or rather for their owner) means an employee working in the named context. However, certain
skilled labourers were seen as
artisans, well-paid and could aspire to become influential
citizens, especially via professional corporations. It was sometimes referred to as "pick and shovel work."
The phrase
hard labour has even become a legal euphemism for
penal labour, i.e. a custodial sentence during which the convict is not only confined but also put to manual work; such work may be productive, as on a
prison farm, or intrinsically senseless, as with a
Treadwheel, the only purpose being the (punishing, therapeutical..) effect of the punishment on the convict.
Beginning with the
Industrial Revolution, though, the introduction of reliable machinery further lowered the status of labourers. The reduction in status led to the worldwide
labour movements of the
19th and early
20th centuries, leading to the formation of
trade unions. Further technological progress leads to an increasing segment of manual labour (generally using machinery) requiring more training or even theoretical insight.
See also
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Construction worker
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The Idler (1993)
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Roughneck
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Elbow grease
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Laborer
See also
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Musculoskeletal Disorders
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LaborFair Resources - Link to Fair Labor Practices