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Self-Help, Inc. - Makeover Culture in American Life (Hardcover, New)
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Self-Help, Inc. - Makeover Culture in American Life (Hardcover, New)
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Why doesn't self-help help? Millions of people turn to
self-improvement when they find that their lives aren't working out
quite as they had imagined. The market for self-improvement
products-books, audiotapes, life-makeover seminars and regimens of
all kinds-is exploding, and there seems to be no end in sight for
this trend. In Self-Help, Inc.: Makeover Culture in American Life,
cultural critic Micki McGee asks what our seemingly insatiable
demand for self-help can tell us about ourselves at the outset of
this new century. The answers are surprising. Rather than finding
an America that is narcissistic or self-involved, as others have
contended, McGee sees a nation relying on self-help culture for
advice on how to cope in an increasingly volatile and competitive
work world. For Americans today, a central component of working has
become working on themselves. "Be all one can be," they are told.
Build your own personal brand. As women have entered the paid labor
force in growing numbers, the Protestant work ethic has been
augmented by a Romantic imperative that one create a vision-a
script-for one's life. More and more, Americans are compelled to
regard themselves in effect as "human capital." No longer simply an
enterprising or entrepreneurial individual, the new worker is the
artist and the artwork, the "CEO of Me, Inc.," in Tom Peters'
memorable phrase, and the central product line. Self-Help, Inc.
reveals how makeover culture traps Americans in endless cycles of
self-invention and overwork as they struggle to stay ahead of a
rapidly restructuring economic order. A lucid and fascinating
treatment of the modern obsession with work and self-improvement,
this book will strike a chord with its diagnosis of the self-help
trap and with its suggestions for how we can address the alienating
conditions of modern work and family life.
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