Bullshit Jobs

hardcover, 333 pages

Published June 3, 2018 by Allen Lane.

ISBN:
978-0-241-26388-4
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4 stars (87 reviews)

Be honest: if your job didn't exist, would anybody miss it? Have you ever wondered why not? Up to 40% of us secretly believe our jobs probably aren't necessary. In other words: they are bullshit jobs. This book shows why, and what we can do about it.

In the early twentieth century, people prophesied that technology would see us all working fifteen-hour weeks and driving flying cars. Instead, something curious happened. Not only have the flying cars not materialised, but average working hours have increased rather than decreased. And now, across the developed world, three-quarters of all jobs are in services, finance or admin: jobs that don't seem to contribute anything to society. In Bullshit Jobs, David Graeber explores how this phenomenon - one more associated with the Soviet Union, but which capitalism was supposed to eliminate - has happened. In doing so, he looks at how, rather than producing …

18 editions

Review of 'Bullshit jobs' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Un essai passionnant et extrêmement instructif sur le travail, son évolution dans l'histoire, comment il est abordé par la religion, la philosophie, la sociologie, la politique, les travaux d'économistes... Il dénonce aussi la société patriarcale et raciste. De nombreux témoignages de personnes occupant des "jobs à la con" ponctuent l'ouvrage et viennent enrichir le propos. Il devrait être lu du plus grand nombre et nous pousser collectivement à réorganiser la société, l'économie et le travail. La lecture est très claire, humoristique, fluide et, en somme, agréable. Grand coup de cœur de mes lectures de cette année !

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'GoodReads'

4 stars

David Graeber presents his theory - that an alarming number of jobs in western society (37-40% at least) are made up just to waste time or fill space, for various reasons. Each chapter digs a little deeper into these reasons, from the overcomplexity of western capitalist systems, to a puritanical attitude toward work (and suffering) being humanity's lot. Finally, he puts forward ideas on what can be done about this. This is all presented with Graeber's artistically analytical eye, his fierce political views, and his wry sense of humour.

Bullshit Jobs was Graeber's final book, which is a pity as it feels like it's building up to a crescendo. He observes western society as an anthropologist, unapologetically making sweeping statements, but using interview and survey as means to reinforce his theory. And it is very convincing. Few people who read this book would fail to identify with some of what …

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I wish I could go back in time and give this book and Tom Hodgkinson's "How to Be Idle" to my 27-year-old self. It would have opened my eyes to what was going on with me and my career at the time. I was pretty miserable after a few dead-end jobs, and starting to despair. Hodgkinson would've shown me I wasn't alone and I wasn't broken. This book would've shown me exactly where the working world WAS broken, and why I was having such a hard time with it. Sadly, neither book was available back then.

The main question of this book is "Why aren't we all working 15-hour weeks, as we were promised in the 1930s?" The answer Graeber finds is that we absolutely could be, but because of some unfortunate political and cultural choices made by society in the 20th century, 94% employment was taken as the greatest …

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I am entirely here for the premise of the book (having read the final third today at my own BS employment), but he conflates jobs that are BS within their firms/organizations with those that are BS parts of the economy. This allows him to inveigh at length about the pointless financial sector (a paradigmatic example of the latter type of BS job) without ever really engaging in the question of the former - is it always just inefficiency and human error that leads to these pointless positions within ostensibly profit-making or efficient operations, or is there a larger phenomenon at work? He never really gets at that question, which I kind of think was what the book promised to do. Minus one star for mismanaged expectations, and his other book drops off the "to-read" list

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

J’avais envie de lire depuis un moment ce livre, tiré du célèbre article du même auteur sur les « bullshit jobs » (les jobs à la con) qui avait fait beaucoup de bruit à l’époque de sa parution.

J’ai beaucoup aimé cet ouvrage, qui aborde frontalement une réalité vécue par beaucoup. Je dois tout de même avouer avoir survolé certains chapitres, en particulier les derniers. Non pas que leur contenu ne soit pas intéressant, bien au contraire, mais ils sont plus théoriques que les premiers et comme je m’interroge beaucoup depuis un moment sur mon rapport au travail, et à mon travail actuel en particulier, j’avais peur d’y retrouver de trop près mes préoccupations actuelles. Manque de courage peut-être, mais je suis persuadé que je reviendrai vers ce livre pour une lecture plus approfondie quand je m’y sentirai prêt.

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

A very interesting book. The last chapter is an argument for UBI that gets done better in other books, in my opinion.

The rest of the book is a really interesting description of what a bullshit job is, how they proliferate, and why we suffer them. I definitely saw aspects of these descriptions in jobs friends or I have held, so the arguments stand up.

Graeber always has a good way of weaving together argument and example. That alone makes this worth reading!

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

David Graeber’s adventure with Bullshit Jobs began when he was asked to write an essay for the radical magazine Strike. His essay, On the Phenomenon of Bullshit Jobs, which was published in 2013, was read over a million times and translated into seventeen different languages. His book Bullshit Jobs: A Theory, expands on this concept and outlines how meaningless work has become. Meaningless jobs were more associated with the Soviet system where they’re making up jobs to keep everybody looking like they’re working. Capitalism is supposed to be the opposite. Markets were supposed to fix the inefficiencies created by the socialist states. Still, somehow, it happens,all over the place.

So, what’s going on? Graeber argues that is has to do with the ideology of work. It is based in the puritan idea that work is valuable in itself; it doesn't have to produce anything. Work, even if it is totally …

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Sooooo disappointed in this book after Graeber's excellent Debt: The First 5000 Years.

While I do believe there are bullshit jobs, and those that harm or subtract value from society, I found his analysis fuzzy, arguable, and to be honest, sloppy and way too tied to Marxist and elitist arguments as to value, labour, and capitalism. I felt the subjective definition of a BS job to be way too fuzzy, though ultimately I think he's on to something about the fact we should all be working less, there are many roles that adds little value (if not harming society), and there needs to be recognition of this, I felt this was shoddy. His assertion that work of value in undervalued compared to work that he says provides none lacks deeper analysis (imho).

However, I do think he is onto something in our need to decouple livelihood from work. While he …

Review of 'Bullshit Jobs' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

There are moments when I felt like the book was being stretched a bit, but it doesn't matter because the main point is an essential one. Our society is completely upside down. We need to decouple surviving and thriving from wage labor. And we need to do it fast. Also good to read this in combination with the Nancy Frasier interview about the Crisis of Care www.dissentmagazine.org/article/nancy-fraser-interview-capitalism-crisis-of-care

Just
drop copies of both in strategic locations until our collective sense starts to come back.

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