Elsewhere, U.S.A.: How We Got from the Company Man, Family Dinners, and the Affluent Society to the Home Office, Blackberry Moms, and Economic Anxiety

Author:   Dalton Conley (New York University)
Publisher:   Pantheon Books
ISBN:  

9780375422904


Pages:   221
Publication Date:   13 January 2009
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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Elsewhere, U.S.A.: How We Got from the Company Man, Family Dinners, and the Affluent Society to the Home Office, Blackberry Moms, and Economic Anxiety


Overview

Over the past three decades, our daily lives have changed slowly but dramatically. Boundaries between leisure and work, public space and private space, and home and office have blurred and become permeable. How many of us now work from home, our wireless economy allowing and encouraging us to work 24/7? How many of us talk to our children while scrolling through e-mails on our BlackBerrys? How many of us feel overextended, as we are challenged to play multiple roles-worker, boss, parent, spouse, friend, and client-all in the same instant?
Dalton Conley, social scientist and writer provides us with an X-ray view of our new social reality. In Elsewhere, U.S.A., Conley connects our daily experience with occasionally overlooked sociological changes: women's increasing participation in the labor force; rising economic inequality generating anxiety among successful professionals; the individualism of the modern era-the belief in self-actualization and expression-being replaced by the need to play different roles in the various realms of one's existence. In this groundbreaking book, Conley offers an essential understanding of how the technological, social, and economic changes that have reshaped our world are also reshaping our individual lives.

Full Product Details

Author:   Dalton Conley (New York University)
Publisher:   Pantheon Books
Imprint:   Pantheon Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.00cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.413kg
ISBN:  

9780375422904


ISBN 10:   0375422900
Pages:   221
Publication Date:   13 January 2009
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Remaindered
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Reviews

No one has written about how we live today more vividly, and more accurately, than Dalton Conley. Elsewhere, U.S.A. explains the multitude of changes-technological, economic, psychological, cultural-that have affected us in recent years, and he makes it possible to find out who we are now as Americans, and why. <br>-Richard Florida, director, Martin Prosperity Institute, University of Toronto, and author of The Rise of the Creative Class <br> Put down your iPhones and BlackBerrys, dear friends, long enough to read this important book about America's new 'elsewhere society, ' where round-the-clock connectivity and multitasking are reshaping the most basic patterns of work, family, and values. Your guide to this brave new world is Dalton Conley, one of America's most brilliant and perspective social commentators and scholars, and an excellent and entertaining writer as well. No other book compares in describing and explaining the texture of modern lives in a hypernetworked and hypermarketized world. Conley's insights might just help to rescue the 'priceless' from the credit card ads and restore it to work, family, friends, and identity, all of which are under siege in our elsewhere society. <br>-Jeffrey D. Sachs, author of The End of Poverty


A well-written, explicitly reasoned argument does not a convert make, nor does the marshaling of facts and figures and phenomena. What New York University sociology professor and author (Honky, 2000; The Pecking Order, 2005; et al.) Conley sets forth is the premise that our work and our lives now blend-and that he is providing a map to this new cultural landscape. For certain, he pokes into and prods every facet of our lives to point out supporting proof points: many offices, for instance, have become total institutions, providing food, concierge services, babysitting, and child care, among other life needs. Public has become private-and vice versa; witness the onset of advertainment (commercials in movies, for one) and cell-phone blasphemy. Marriage has been transformed into serial monogamy, or, as he prefers, dynamic polygamy. And the intravidual reigns, uncomfortable disharmony between inner and outer selves. The thinking's sound, yet it's an amalgamation and synthesis of others' o


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