When Did White-Collar Work Start to Look So Bleak?
7 hours ago
- #economic anxiety
- #graduation speeches
- #workplace culture
- Graduation speakers in 2026 faced backlash for promoting AI's inevitability, with graduates booing at universities like Arizona, Central Florida, and Middle Tennessee State.
- Jodi Kantor's book 'How to Start' offers career advice, emphasizing work as a source of fulfillment and control, contrasting with modern anxieties about employment.
- The film 'Working Girl' from 1988 reflects the yuppie era's ideal of climbing the corporate ladder through ambition and meritocracy, despite cutthroat environments.
- Dylan Gottlieb's book 'Yuppies' explores the 1980s professionals in finance and law, highlighting their work-centric lifestyles, competitive leisure, and the illusion of meritocracy.
- Noam Scheiber's 'Mutiny' details the 'college-educated working class' struggling with underemployment, debt, and organizing efforts in service jobs like Starbucks and Apple Stores.
- The 2023 Writers Guild strike showed intergenerational solidarity against AI threats and job instability in TV writing, influenced by streaming and tech changes.
- Arlie Hochschild's research in 'The Time Bind' reveals workers prioritizing work over family for control and safety, even in stressful jobs.
- Despite Kantor's optimism, modern graduates face economic precarity, with AI and shifting job markets challenging the traditional link between education and stable employment.