Rating: Not rated
Tags: Business & Economics, Labor, Workplace Culture, Biography & Autobiography, Business, Lang:en
Publisher: Crown
Added: December 6, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
“An engaging, humorous, revealing, and refreshingly
human look at the bizarre, life-threatening, and delightfully
humdrum exploits of everyone from sports heroes to sex
workers.” -- Douglas Rushkoff, author of Coercion,
Ecstasy Club, and Media VirusThis wide-ranging survey of the
American economy at the turn of the millennium is stunning,
surprising, and always entertaining. It gives us an
unflinching view of the fabric of this country from the point
of view of the people who keep it all moving. The more than
120 roughly textured monologues that make up Gig beautifully
capture the voices of our fast-paced and diverse economy. The
selections demonstrate how much our world has changed--and
stayed the same--in the three decades prior to the turn of
the millennium. If you think things have speeded up, become
more complicated and more technological, you're right.But
people's attitudes about their jobs, their hopes and goals
and disappointments, endure. Gig's soul isn't
sociological--it's emotional. The wholehearted diligence that
people bring to their work is deeply, inexplicably moving.
People speak in these pages of the constant and complex
stresses nearly all of them confront on the job, but, nearly
universally, they throw themselves without reservation into
coping with them. Instead of resisting work, we seem to adapt
to it. Some of us love our jobs, some of us don't, but almost
all of us are not quite sure what we would do without
one.With all the hallmarks of another classic on this
subject, Gig is a fabulous read, filled with indelible voices
from coast to coast. After hearing them, you'll never again
feel quite the same about how we work.