The corrosion of character : the personal consequences of work in the new capitalism

by Richard Sennett

Hardcover, 1998

Status

Available

Publication

New York ; London : Norton, 1998.

Description

Drawing on interviews with dismissed IBM executives in Westchester, New York, bakers in a high-tech Boston bakery, a barmaid turned advertising executive, and many others, Sennett explores the disorienting effects of the new capitalism. He reveals the vivid and illuminating contrast between two worlds of work: the vanished world of rigid, hierarchical organizations, where what mattered was a sense of personal character, and the brave new world of corporate re-engineering, risk, flexibility, networking, and short-term teamwork, where what matters is being able to reinvent yourself on a dime. In this timely and essential essay, Sennett enables us to understand the social and political context for our contemporary confusions, and he suggests how we need to re-imagine both community and individual character in order to confront an economy based on the principle of "no long term."… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member mjperry
Fabulous. One of he best books I've read about different economic systems and the consequences they have for ordinary people.
LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
I found it an interesting read about how people are finding it hard to cope with the way work is being presented and the worship of youth over older and experience. Flexibility is one thing but feeling valued in your job and that there is some security is another.

It isn't really my area of
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expertise but I did find it interesting to read and it did solidify some of my ideas about how work is going.
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Language

Barcode

11713
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