Huge swathes of people spend their days performing tasks they secretly believe are not really necessary. This book shows why, and what we can do about it.
David Graeber was a professor of anthropology at the London School of Economics. He is the author of, among others, The Dawn of Everything- A New History of Humanity, Debt- The First 5,000 Years, Bullshit Jobs- A Theory, and Pirate Enlightenment, and was a contributor to Harper's Magazine, the Guardian, and the Baffler. An iconic thinker and renowned activist, his early efforts helped to make Occupy Wall Street an era-defining movement. He died on 2 September 2020.
Spectacular and terrifyingly true. David Graeber's theory of the
broken capitalist workforce is right - work has become an end in
itself. A timely book from the most provocative anthropologist and
thinker of our time.
*Owen Jones*
Equally explosive, my anarchist friend, David Graeber, yet again
has thrown a hand grenade into the political economy debate with
his Bullshit Jobs (Allen Lane), a call to strike out for freedom
from meaningless work.
*New Statesman, Books of the Year*
Here's a gift for a friend working in PR or HR. David Graeber's
thesis is that they are working in"bullshit jobs". A bullshit job,
he says, is one that its holder knows to be pointless or pernicious
even though they must pretend otherwise. There are five sorts:
flunkies (commissionaires, receptionists), goons (lobbyists,
lawyers), duct tapers (who sort out problems others have created),
box tickers, and taskmasters (management). It's a provocative case
... but you get the feeling he is on to something; there do seem to
be a lot of pointless jobs in the modern economy
*The Times, Books of the Year*
Anthropologist David Graeber embarks on a provocative quest to find
and explain the existence of countless mindless and pointless
roles. He divides them into "flunkies", "goons", "duct-tapers",
"box-tickers", and "taskmasters". It is an entertaining, if
subjective study of a problem and an examination of potential
answers, including a universal basic income.
*Financial Times, Business Book of the Year*
Anthropology professor and colourful anarchist David Graeber has
opened a Pandora's box of the modern era by questioning the
relevance of the swollen ranks of middle management and bullshit
jobs that have cropped up across a variety of industries. A
controversial but thought-provoking endeavour
*City AM Book of the Year*
An LSE anthropologist with a track record of countering economic
myths through a mix of anecdote, erudition, and political
radicalism, Graeber is as good an analyst of the increasingly
cowpatted field of modern employment as one could wish. And
entertaining and thoroughly depressing read... it is extremely
thought-provoking
*Telegraph*
A provocative, funny and engaging book... that captures the
imagination and deserves our attention
*Financial Times*
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