Categorii: Diverse
Limba: Engleza
Data publicării: 2007
Editura: Yale University Press
Tip copertă: Paperback
Nr Pag: 224
ISBN: 9780300119923
Dimensiuni: l: 14cm | H: 21cm | 300g
The distinguished sociologist Richard Sennett surveys major
differences between earlier forms of industrial capitalism and the more
global, more febrile, ever more mutable version of capitalism that is
taking its place. He shows how these changes affect everyday life―how
the work ethic is changing; how new beliefs about merit and talent
displace old values of craftsmanship and achievement; how what Sennett
calls “the specter of uselessness” haunts professionals as well as
manual workers; how the boundary between consumption and politics is
dissolving.
In recent years, reformers of both private and public institutions
have preached that flexible, global corporations provide a model of
freedom for individuals, unlike the experience of fixed and static
bureaucracies Max Weber once called an “iron cage.” Sennett argues that,
in banishing old ills, the new-economy model has created new social and
emotional traumas. Only a certain kind of human being can prosper in
unstable, fragmentary institutions: the culture of the new capitalism
demands an ideal self oriented to the short term, focused on potential
ability rather than accomplishment, willing to discount or abandon past
experience. In a concluding section, Sennett examines a more durable
form of self hood, and what practical initiatives could counter the
pernicious effects of “reform.”