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Shadow Work

The Unpaid, Unseen Jobs That Fill Your Day

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Shadow Work

By: Craig Lambert
Narrated by: James Jenner
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About this listen

With the exception of sleep, humans spend more of their lifetimes on work than any other activity. It is central to our economy, our society, and the family. It underpins our finances and our sense of meaning in life. Given the overriding importance of work, we need to recognize a profound transformation in the nature of work that is significantly altering lives: the incoming tidal wave of shadow work. Shadow work includes all the unpaid tasks we do on behalf of businesses and organizations. It has slipped into our routines stealthily; most of us do not realize how much of it we are already doing, even as we pump our own gas, scan and bag our own groceries, execute our own stock trades, and build our own unassembled furniture. But its presence is unmistakable and its effects far-reaching. Fueled by the twin forces of technology and skyrocketing personnel costs, shadow work has taken a foothold in our society. Lambert terms its prevalence as "middle-class serfdom" and examines its sources in the invasion of robotics, the democratization of expertise, and new demands on individuals at all levels of society. The end result? A more personalized form of consumption, a great social leveling (pedigrees don't help with shadow work!), and the weakening of communities as robotics reduce daily human interaction. Shadow Work offers a field guide to this new phenomenon. It shines a light on these trends now so prevalent in our daily lives and, more importantly, offers valuable insight into how to counter their effects. It will be essential reading to anyone seeking to understand how their days got so full - and how to deal with the ubiquitous shadow work that surrounds them.

©2015 Craig Lambert (P)2015 Recorded Books
Economics Labour & Industrial Relations Social Psychology & Interactions Sociology Technology & Society Workplace Culture Business Thought-Provoking Robotics
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Narration annoying

Some very interesting observations on the "unpaid" tasks that we all do. However, the narrator pauses for too long after every sentence and it felt like there was no flow in the narration, so had to stop listening after a few chapters.

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