A revolutionary new history of humankind through the prism of work, from the origins of life on Earth to our ever-more automated present
James Suzman is an anthropologist specialising in the Khoisan peoples of southern Africa. A recipient of the Smuts Commonwealth Fellowship in African Studies at Cambridge University, he is now the director of Anthropos Ltd, a think tank that applies anthropological methods to solving contemporary social and economic problems. He has written for publications including the New York Times, the Observer, the Guardian, the New Statesman and the Independent, and has advised organisations including the Foreign Office, the World Bank and the European Commission. He lives in Cambridge.
As automation threatens to completely disrupt the global job
market, it is urgent to rethink the economic, psychological and
even spiritual importance of work. By examining the lives of
hunter-gatherers, apes and even birds, Suzman highlights that what
we consider "natural" is often just the questionable legacy of
industrial gurus and agricultural religions. Knowing the history of
how we have spent our time in the past will hopefully enable us to
make more sensible choices in the future -- Yuval Noah Harari
There is eminently underlinable stuff on most pages . . .
Fascinating * The Times *
In this illuminating "deep history", the anthropologist James
Suzman interrogates mainstream economic assumptions about human
nature and argues that to make sense of our modern culture of
rising inequality we must first understand our past * New Statesman
*
For too long, our notions of work have been dominated by economists
obsessed with scarcity and productivity. As an anthropologist,
James Suzman is here to change that. He reveals that for much of
human history, hunter-gathers worked far less than we do today and
led lives of abundance and leisure. I've been studying work for two
decades, and I can't remember the last time I learned so much about
it in one sitting. This book is a tour de force -- Adam Grant,
bestselling author of 'Give and Take' and 'Originals'
A groundbreaking history of work, which exposes the
productivity-at-all-costs mindset to strike a blow at the myth of
the economic problem. I learned something new on every page --
Grace Blakeley
Brilliant ... I thought I had read enough by now to know what work
is and why we so often feel compelled to work - but I was wrong --
Danny Dorling
Deeply researched, broad in scope and filled with insight, this is
a modern classic. Every page brings something worth thinking hard
about -- Seth Godin, author of 'Survival is Not Enough'
Automation of all kinds looms on the horizon. Luckily, James Suzman
is here with a revelatory new history that makes a persuasive case:
that human industry can light a path forward, even in a future
where we're put out of work by our own inventions -- Charles
Duhigg
Chronicles how much humankind can still learn from the disappearing
way of life of the most marginalised communities on earth -- Yuval
Noah Harari on 'Affluence without Abundance'
Elegant and absorbing ... Rich with ethnographic detail, stylish,
perceptive, compassionate and, ultimately, tragic -- Financial
Times on 'Affluence without Abundance'
Here is one of those few books that will turn your customary ways
of thinking upside down. An incisive and original new history that
invites us to rethink our relationship with work - and to reimagine
what it means to be human in an ever-more automated future -- Susan
Cain
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