It's a literary tradition to claim that a quiet desperation is the fate of the white-collar worker. Herman Melville on Bartleby, the unwilling scrivener, C. Wright Mills on the office drones of the 1940s and '50s, and the authors of such recent books as The Corrosion of Character (Richard Sennett) and White Collar Sweatshop (Jill Andresky Fraser) all describe people whose jobs are superficial and whose status is unstable. The bosses above accumulate the profits and power; the manual workers below at least know they are making or serving products nearly everyone needs. But the salaried masses have only their anxieties and the occasional ambition, usually frustrated, to go into business for themselves.
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Strange Alchemy
Michael Kazin: In A Conservative History of the American Left, Daniel Flynn can't decide whether to ridicule the left or fear it.
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Hatchet Man's Heresy Hunt...
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Barbara Ehrenreich's White Collar Blues
Michael Kazin: Barbara Ehrenreich probes a deeper level of white-collar angst: people who lose or quit their corporate jobs and routinely spend months, even years, finding another.
But few of the people who read Nickel and Dimed earn their keep with a mop or by stocking shelves, and most live neither in a trailer park nor in a grimy, pay-by-the-week motel. So to explore the lives of "people who were once members in good standing of the middle class," Ehrenreich put together a phony résumé, purchased a few new outfits and began searching for a job in public relations. That goal seemed logical too. After all, Ehrenreich is a veteran journalist and, as she notes, "PR is really journalism's evil twin."
Unfortunately, she never got to flack for a big corporation or trade rumors with her fellow white-collars by the coffee machine. After struggling for almost a year on the job market, Ehrenreich failed to land a position. By her account, she was "admirably flexible, applying at one point for a job as PR director of the American Diabetes Association and then switching sides and offering myself to Hershey's." But her age and several ominous "gaps" in her made-up career did her in.
She started the job-seeking process by sampling the world of job "coaches" and "networkers," and only made it out in time to write this book. As in every inferno of psychobabble, her experience was at once ludicrous and depressing. Ehrenreich spent time with a coach who used dolls of Elvis and of characters from The Wizard of Oz to divine her personality type; another gave her a battery of simple-minded tests and then declared that the results proved her client to be "the commandant...a natural leader!" The same peppy coach advised the skeptical Ehrenreich, who is over 60, to cleanse her résumé by lopping two decades off her age and eliminating all references to jobs she held before the 1990s.
These were solitary escapades, but to network with the well-dressed unemployed was to enter a sadder circle of hell. Ehrenreich describes several of the gatherings she attended, which dressed up the age-old clichés of self-reliance in the oddly complementary lingoes of aggression and "spirituality." There was the "boot camp" in Atlanta where a would-be Dr. Phil told the assembled job seekers to "find the one place out there that will nurture and value YOU!" and then chided them for not being team players. There was the PowerPoint obsessive, an Alec Baldwin look-alike "only without the sexual edge" who counseled a band of doleful networkers to think of themselves as being "in transition" instead of out of work. "You're executives here," he told the group, which was supposed to furnish the necessary steel to confront a bank about to foreclose on one's home. And, inevitably, there was a "fellowship lunch" at which the Ten Commandments got passed off as advice for job seekers. Ehrenreich, a confirmed atheist, refrained from challenging her Christian hosts to justify how they could turn the First Commandment ("You shall have no other gods before Me") into an injunction to "show proper respect for authority"--namely, the boss.
Unemployed white-collars signal their despair when they spend hundreds, even thousands, of dollars traveling to and attending such sessions. The organizers secure a steady income for themselves by gulling the unlucky into devoting at least as much time to searching for a job as they would spend actually working at one. As Ehrenreich observes, these con artists manage to reproduce one of "the more regrettable features of employment, like having to follow orders--orders which are in this case self-generated." Fortunately, she's on their case, exposing the cant spewed out by corporate culture, while never forgetting that clever ridicule is always more convincing than righteous rage.
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