The Job: Work and Its Future in a Time of Radical Change

The Job: Work and Its Future in a Time of Radical Change

by Ellen Ruppel Shell
The Job: Work and Its Future in a Time of Radical Change

The Job: Work and Its Future in a Time of Radical Change

by Ellen Ruppel Shell

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

Critically acclaimed journalist Ellen Ruppel Shell uncovers the true cost—political, economic, social, and personal—of America's mounting anxiety over jobs, and what we can do to regain control over our working lives.

Since 1973, our productivity has grown almost six times faster than our wages. Most of us rank so far below the top earners in the country that the "winners" might as well inhabit another planet. But work is about much more than earning a living. Work gives us our identity, and a sense of purpose and place in this world. And yet, work as we know it is under siege.

Through exhaustive reporting and keen analysis, The Job reveals the startling truths and unveils the pervasive myths that have colored our thinking on one of the most urgent issues of our day: how to build good work in a globalized and digitalized world where middle class jobs seem to be slipping away. Traveling from deep in Appalachia to the heart of the Midwestern rust belt, from a struggling custom clothing maker in Massachusetts to a thriving co-working center in Minnesota, she marshals evidence from a wide range of disciplines to show how our educational system, our politics, and our very sense of self have been held captive to and distorted by outdated notions of what it means to get and keep a good job. We read stories of sausage makers, firefighters, zookeepers, hospital cleaners; we hear from economists, computer scientists, psychologists, and historians. The book's four sections take us from the challenges we face in scoring a good job today to work's infinite possibilities in the future. Work, in all its richness, complexity, rewards and pain, is essential for people to flourish. Ellen Ruppel Shell paints a compelling portrait of where we stand today, and points to a promising and hopeful way forward.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780451497253
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Publication date: 10/23/2018
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 416
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.40(d)

About the Author

Ellen Ruppel Shell, a correspondent for The Atlantic, co-directs the Graduate Program in Science Journalism at Boston University. She has written for the New York Times, the Washington Post, The Guardian, The Smithsonian, Slate, the Los Angeles Times, The Boston Globe, O, Scientific American, and Science Magazine. She is the author of Cheap: The High Cost of Discount Culture, The Hungry Gene, and A Child's Place. She lives in the Boston metropolitan area.

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Excerpted from "The Job"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Ellen Ruppel Shell.
Excerpted by permission of The Crown Publishing Group.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Introduction: A Measure of Our Sanity 1

Prologue: The Unbroken 15

Part I Our National Jobs Disorder 21

1 Suffering Less 23

2 Coming Out Of The Coffin 49

3 Should Robots Pay Taxes? 68

4 Let Them Eat Apps 84

Part II Choices 95

5 The Passion Paradox 97

6 Habits Of The Heart 116

Part III Learning To Labor 135

7 A Child's Work 137

8 Mind The (Skills) Gap 158

9 The Thousand-Mile Stare 176

10 When The Spirit Catches You 194

Part IV Thinking Anew 211

11 The Finnish Line 213

12 Abolish Human Rentals 237

13 Punk Makers 266

14 Homo Faber 289

Acknowledgments 323

Notes 327

Index 387

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