亨利,A.(2022)。《看到、听到和得到报酬:边缘人群的新工作规则》。罗代尔

Nathaniel Heggins Bryant
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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为一名黑人,在以白人为主(当然也包括白领)的空间里工作多年的经历,为资深科技和生产力记者兼编辑艾伦·亨利(Alan Henry)的第一本书提供了素材。正如这本书的副标题所示,《所见、所闻、所付》应该被解读为一系列针对处于类似处境的边缘化工人的具体而实用的建议。亨利直接指出了白领工作是如何在过时的种族、性别和基于阶级的等级制度下运作的,这些等级制度以白人男性为中心,并以白人男性为中心,而牺牲了那些来自未被充分代表的身份群体的同事。他的建议面对着许多在很大程度上没有说出来的对工作成功的期望,他将那些经常在员工私语网络中流传的建议正式化并系统化,这些建议是关于如何在工作中取得成功,而不会成为“办公室妈妈”,做一些必要但不体面的工作来维持办公室的运转,或者在员工为自己辩护时不会被认为是自私、吵闹或不具有团队精神的不公平的名声。(长期以来,对职场动态的交叉分析证明,这些声誉几乎总是与性别、阶级和种族有关——通常这三者同时发生作用。)对女性、酷儿工作者和有色人种来说,在不被进一步边缘化的情况下,保护自己,实现个人成功和满足,已经是一项相当令人担忧的挑战。此外,大多数被边缘化的员工对工作有更高的期望,晋升的上限也更低,他们也会经历更高的倦怠率,以及日常的微侵犯,正如他在书中娴熟地展示的那样。
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Henry, A. (2022). Seen, Heard, and Paid: The New Work Rules for the Marginalized. Rodale
Years of experience working as a Black man in largely white (and, to be sure, white-collar) spaces inform longtime tech and productivity journalist and editor Alan Henry’s first book. As the book’s subtitle suggests, Seen, Heard, and Paid should be read as a series of specific and practical recommendations for marginalized workers who find themselves in similar situations. Henry directly addresses many facets of how white-collar work still operates on outdated racial, gendered, and class-based hierarchies that center and promote white men at the expense of their co-workers who are from underrepresented identity groups. His advice confronts many largely unspoken expectations about success on the job and he formalizes and codifies the kind of advice that has often circulated in worker whisper-networks about how to get ahead at work without becoming ‘the office mom,’ someone who does necessary but unglorified work to keep the office going, or without earning an unfair reputation for supposedly being selfish, or loud, or not a team player when a worker stands up for themselves. (Intersectional analyses of workplace dynamics have long documented how these reputations are nearly always gendered, classed, and racialized—often all three working in tandem at the same time.) Threading the needle of protecting one’s self and achieving personal success and satisfaction without becoming further marginalized already presents a rather fraught set of challenges on its own for women, queer workers, and people of color. In addition, most marginalized workers have higher work expectations with lower ceilings of promotion, and also experience higher rates of burnout, as well as daily microaggressions, as his book adroitly demonstrates.
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