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White-Collar Hell

Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream, published this week by Metropolitan Books, is a return to matters that Barbara Ehrenreich has written about in the past. And no, I don’t just mean the world of economic hard knocks.

Intellectual Affairs

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In obvious ways, the new book’s narrative of trying to get a white-collar corporate job (say, as a public-relations person) is similar in method and tone to Nickel and Dimed (2001), her account of the lives the working poor. Both are works of first-person reporting a la George Orwell’s Road to Wigan Pier — treading the fine line between investigative journalism and participant-observer ethnography, with the occasional dash of satire thrown in.

But Ehrenreich’s new book also revisits a world first explored in her early work on “the professional-managerial class” (often abbreviated as PMC). In papers written during the late 1970s with her first husband, John Ehrenreich, she worked out an exacting Marxist analysis of the PMC as “consisting of salaried mental workers who do not own the means of production” (hence aren’t capitalists) but whose “major function in the social division of labor may be broadly described as the reproduction of capitalist culture and capitalist relations.” Ehrenreich revisited the topic, in a more popular vein, with Fear of Falling: The Inner Life of the Middle Class (1989).

You don’t hear any trace of sociological diction in Ehrenreich’s latest book, in which she goes undercover as “Barbara Alexander,” a homemaker with some work experience in writing and event-planning. (Alexander’s resume is a more modest rewriting of Ehrenreich’s own background as academic and journalist.) Her search for a new job puts her in competition with other casualties of downsizing and midlife unemployment. She spends her time reading Monster.com, not Louis Althusser.

But some of Ehrenreich’s old theoretical concerns do pop up as she tries to land a gig on the lower rungs of the PMC hierarchy. More than a quarter century ago, she had written that the private life of the middle class “becomes too arduous to be lived in private: the inner life of the PMC must be continuously shaped, updated and revised by ... ever mounting numbers of experts.” And so Barbara Alexander finds teams of “career consultants” ready to help her adjust her outlook to fit into the new corporate culture. How? Through the modern science of psychobabble.

After reviewing Bait and Switch for Newsday, I still had some questions about where the book fit into Ehrenreich’s thinking. Happily, she was willing to answer them by e-mail.

Q: Nickel and Dimed has become a standard reading assignment for undergraduates over the past few years, and some of that audience must now be entering the white-collar job market you describe in Bait and Switch. Is there anything in the new book intended as guidance for readers who will be facing that reality?

A: I’d like to reach undergraduates with Bait and Switch before they decide on a business career. I’m haunted by the kid I met at Siena College, in N.Y., who told me he was really interested in psychology, but since that isn’t “practical,” he was going into marketing, which draws on psychology — though, as this fellow sadly admitted, only for the purpose of manipulating people. Or the gal I met at University of Oregon who wants to be a journalist but is drifting toward PR so she can make a living.

Right now, business is the most popular undergraduate major in America, largely because young people believe it will lead to wealth or at least security. I want them to rethink that decision, or at least do some hard thinking about what uses they would like apply their business skills to.

There’s not much by way of individual guidance in Bait and Switch, but I do want to get people thinking more about corporate domination, not only of the economy, but of our psyches. Generally speaking, the corporations have us by the short hairs wherever you look, and of course, one source of their grip is the idea that they are the only or the major source of jobs. I’m asking, what kind of jobs — back-breaking low-wage jobs as in Nickel and Dimed, or transient, better-paid jobs that seem to depend heavily on one’s ability to be a suck-up, as in Bait and Switch?

Q:The pages in Bait and Switch devoted to New Age-inflected business-speak are quite funny — but in an angry way. How much do you think people really buy into this ideology? Do they take it seriously? Or is it just something you have to repeat, to be part of the tribe?

A: Well, someone must believe it, or there wouldn’t be any market for all the business advice books spewed out by career coaches and management gurus. I had the impression that the job seekers I was mingling with usually thought they should believe it all, or at least should act as if they believe it all. There certainly seems to be a lot of fear of being different or standing out in any way.

Q:What’s the relationship between the world you are describing in the new book and that of the professional-managerial class? Are business professionals fully fledged members of the PMC? Or are they clueless and self-deluding mimics of it? All of the above?

A: Sure, they’re bona fide members of the PMC as John Ehrenreich and I defined it in the 70s; they are college-educated and they command others or at least determine the work that others will do. But your question makes me think that an update on the PMC is long overdue.

In the late 80s, when I wrote Fear of Falling, it looked like the part of the PMC employed as corporate operatives was doing pretty well compared to the more academic and intellectual end of the PMC, which was beginning to get battered by HMOs (in the case of physicians), budget cuts (in the case of college professors, social workers, and others), etc.

Starting in the late 80s, though — and insufficiently noted by me at the time — the corporate operative-types began to lose whatever purchase they had on stability. First there were the mergers and acquisitions of the 80s, which inevitably led to white collar job loss; then there was the downsizing of the 90s; and now of course the outsourcing of many business-professional functions. So no one is safe.

Q: Do people in this sphere have any way to win a degree of real control over their economic condition? If they don’t have some regulation of the market for their labor via certification (i.e. real professionalization) and they find it unimaginable to be unionized, does that leave them any options?

A: No. As a blue collar union friend of mine commented: They bought the line, they never had any concept of solidarity, and now they’re sunk.

Q: In reporting this book, you created an alter ego, “Barbara Alexander,” who is not the same person as Barbara Ehrenreich. But she’s not totally different, either. There is a degree of overlap in age, background, work experience, etc. The job search proves fairly humiliating for Barbara Alexander. Was it hard to keep some distance from the role? It felt like she might explode a few times.

A: Remember, “Barbara Alexander” was just my cover; I only distanced myself enough to be a fairly low-key observer/reporter. Hence no tantrums or crazed rants. So yes, a certain amount of self-control was necessary, and it did take its toll. I often felt extremely soiled, compromised and generally yucky about the whole venture.

By which I don’t mean I’m too pure to be involved in the great corporate money-making machine (my books, after all, are published by a large corporation and I happily accept my royalties) but that I was trying to act like someone I’m not and that I suspect very few people are, i.e., the endlessly upbeat, compliant, do-with-me-what-you-will corporate employee.

Q: Some aspects of the labor market you describe in Bait and Switch sound comparable to trends emerging in parts of academe. Any thoughts on that score? Have you considered writing, say, Ivy and Adjunct?

A: You want me to go undercover as an adjunct? No way. First, I’ve been an adjunct, years ago, at both NYU and the College of New Rochelle, and I understand the pay hasn’t improved since then. So sorry, that option is no more enticing than another stint at Wal-Mart.

Someone should write about it though. The condition of adjuncts, who provide the bulk of higher ed in this country, is an absolute scandal. I’ve met adjuncts who moonlight as maids and waitresses, and I’ve read about homeless ones. If the right is so worried about the academy being too left wing, they should do something about the treatment of adjuncts (and many junior faculty.) There’s something about hunger that has a way of turning people to the left.

Scott McLemee writes Intellectual Affairs on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Suggestions and ideas for future columns are welcome.

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Comments

Where is this going?

“I suspect very few people are, i.e., the endlessly upbeat, compliant, do-with-me-what-you-will corporate employee.”

An easy retort would be cite the realpolitik and “openness” permitted Stalin and his Eastern European volunteers, as well as Mao, Ho Chi Minh, Fidel, et al.

Further, anyone who has been around any major political party/interest group in the West knows how dissenters from the dominant paradigm are treated — like trouble-making traitors.

And do production companies owned by the likes of multi-millionaires Michael Moore or Jane Fonda have ombuds-persons? Entertainment companies are among the most-brutal of capitalists — either deliver “the magic” or starve.

IMHO, the question awaiting an answer:

Explain how the U.S. — as large, complex, diverse, and private property-loving as its population is — becomes Sweden? Not the view from 30,000 feet — step-by-step, voter-group by voter-group.

A.D., at 7:11 am EDT on September 8, 2005

Professional-Managerial Class

An excellent interview. If Barbara Ehrenreich is tuning in and willing to take part in this discussion, here’s something I’d be interestedin hearing her clarify: As I recall the old writings on the professional-managerial class, they were an attempt to rise above castigations of the petty bourgeoisie by distinguishing the small propertied, small-business part of the middle class from the credentialled, educated, professionalized middle class lying between capital and labor. It was also, self-evidently, a project interested in discerning why many professionals in the 1960s and 1970s had moved toward reformism or even radicalism to become part of what Harrington would later term the “conscience constituency” (a term I don’t especially like, but it suits). This social awareness and desire for politically generated change was manifested in professionals at least as early as the Progressive Era. To what extent does that impulse survive? Obviously there is a readership for books like yours, Eric Schlosser’s, Naomi Klein’s, and so forth, but to what extent does the readership act on the message, and to what extent—in an age, as you rightly identify, both of psychobabble but of the desperate economic and social insecurity that gives psychobabble life (and some things here unmentioned, such as the enormous power of the organized right, politically and in the media)—does the potentiality for movement from the left still exist in this ambiguous social class, which probably votes Republican more often than not?

Christopher Phelps, Department of History at The Ohio State University, at 8:14 am EDT on September 8, 2005

Barbara Ehrenreich Has Left the Building

Glad to have the interesting question from Prof. Phelps, but I’m afraid Ehrenreich might not see it for a while. Her media blitz has now formally begun (according to TiVo, she was on the Today show this a.m.) and it’s probably all talk shows and book signings for the next few weeks.

But perhaps other readers would like to take up the line of questioning that Phelps has opened?

Scott McLemee, columnist at Inside Higher Ed, at 8:53 am EDT on September 8, 2005

How & why adjunct salaries stay so low

Supply exceeds demand. Well-educated spouses of faculty and staff — and ABDs — are often shackled to a community by their partner’s tenure.

Please excuse cross-posting to a competitor — and believe me, I’m glad you’ve arrived to compete with them — but I found this article interesting.

August 18, 2005

The lack of raises for part-time faculty members explains how adjunct salaries got so low in the first place, and why they stay so low.

http://chronicle.com/jobs/2005/08/2005081601c.htm

psstwife, at 10:08 am EDT on September 8, 2005

Barbara Ehrenreich

Apart the low salaries, what is there that is so threatening about a job at Walmart? Gabriel Austin

Gabriel Austin, at 11:14 am EDT on September 8, 2005

adjunct salaries and raises + professorial working conditions

I just received a 12.6% increase in my adjunct salary after one year of service to UMUC. And I didn’t even know it was coming.

I toil away online — which actually suits my disabilities far better than classroom teaching, so I am grateful for the opportunity. And while that 12.6% raise is 12.6% of practically nothing, it’s still substantially better than any other adjunct salary I have seen elsewhere.

One thing that also needs to be addressed even for full time professors is the expectation — at least for junior faculty — that they will spend 60-80+ hours a week on teaching, research and committee work, to the detriment of all other aspects of life, including family. That nearly killed me. It exacerbated chronic conditions that I did not even know existed at first, and then I tried to deny them and pretend I could “handle it” — for fear of losing my job. And I lost it anyway. Then when I interviewed at other places I was told the accommodations I needed for my conditions (such as no early morning classes) were unreasonable.

I was unemployed and living on less than $800 a month total, combining SSDI and a miniscule TIAA-CREF annuity, for FIVE years. I had to rely on social services in order to avoid homelessness.

So today I am practically “rich” by comparison.

Part of the reason my SSDI was so low despite the fact that I had worked for 20+ years is that the majority of my work experience involved working part-time for state and county entities — most of it teaching. Public institutions were not required to contribute or withhold any FICA for part-time workers. (I don’t know if that has changed.) Of course, that part-time work was often full-time hours because I worked at several institutions at the same time in order to make ends meet.

So much for education (PhD) guaranteeing financial stability...

Georgia, adjunct associate professor at University of Maryland University College, at 12:06 pm EDT on September 8, 2005

The WalMart question

As I recall from an interview I heard with Barbara Ehrenreich right after “Nickel and Dimed” was published, she stated that after her experience at Wal Mart, she would never use the term “unskilled labor” again. It was a far more mentally challenging job than she was anticipating. The example I remember was that she had to memorize, then re-learn, the floor layouts that were constantly changed. And of course, the pay doesn’t reflect the amount of work that goes into the job.

I think that’s why she used Wal Mart in her interview as the last job she’d want. It was a difficult, low-paying position. That description may sound familiar to the adjuncts out there. :)

Bailey, at 12:35 pm EDT on September 8, 2005

Ehrenreich is Brilliant

Barbara Ehrenreich is a phenomenal researcher and writer. I just wish she would see the merit in researching and writing the adjunct situation. It needs to be done by somebody brilliant like herself. A book needs to be written that will explain the paradox of accomplished, experienced professors with high credentials who dedicate themselves to teaching college students, for a tiny fraction of what their tenure-track and tenured colleages make — for less than they made as teaching assistants in graduate school. Readings’ “The University in Ruins” needs a thorough followup on what’s happening now, with “part-time professors” who teach six and seven courses a semester at two or three different colleges, just to eek out an existence. This is the Age of Adjuncts. They are the cash-cows of corporate higher learning. Such a book needs to be written in terms that students will understand. It needs to be written with a view to both the political economy of profit-motivated institutions of learning, and the negritude of adjuncts’ face-to-face interactions with colleages who are not colleagues, and with administrators who are sadistic and cruel. Not simply the economic facts of hardship, but the damaged life chances and damaged lives that servitude to the academic system causes. The stress, depression, and cognitive dissonance. The struggle to hide and deny one’s Ph.D and teaching experience in order to hold down other contingent labor jobs like sales and typing that pay the rent; the educated presentation of self that unwittingly gives it all away and gets one fired for being “too good” and too smart. And the other desperate strategies that adjuncts use to cope. Barbara Ehrenreich has the ability to do that. I wish she would consider it.

A once-homeless adjunct, at 4:45 am EDT on September 9, 2005

Another homeless adjunct (now smarter)

I thought I could beat the odds (5-1), and join the ranks of the tenured. I might have made a mistake. Last year was one of the worst years for academic hiring in 40 years, IMHO.

The hiring process is so chaotic and political, only the very elite are clear winners. Now, after HK, I’m seriously considering dropping out and finding a real job. It couldn’t be, any worse.

Bob A., at 9:47 am EDT on September 9, 2005

Supply/Demand in academia

Bob A. discussed the unfavorable supply/demand ratio in his academic field. Barbara Ehrenreich said that Business is the most popular major for undergraduates.

I found these two facts interesting, as the AACSB has reported that there are not enough business professors and that this situation is likely to get worse in the years to come (http://www.aacsb.edu/publications/dfc/default.asp).

Frank Montabon, at 2:39 pm EDT on September 9, 2005

Odds still too high

Tried the AACSB route. Applicant ratio at smallest schools is 7-1; Harvard 26-1. Not good.

Bob A., at 4:50 pm EDT on September 9, 2005

Who provides your health insurance?

Just watched the author on BookTV. Heard her pitch for national health insurance. (The next HK-like disaster?)

A free suggestion for her and the National Review crowd: make the Clintons, Bushies, Kennedy-ites, Kerry-ites’ health care plans, equal to that of the national median average (probably 50-50 co-pay, with a $25K max). That might wake them up — fast.

A.D., at 9:40 pm EDT on September 10, 2005

Ehrenreich interview

Barbara’s responses indicate that, once again, she’s right on the money (or lack thereof to adjuncts and others in the PMC). And it looks like a tough row to hoe when thinking about whether people in the PMC will find means for organizing themselves. Clearly, one institution still doesn’t have aclue (or indeed much interest) in their organizing, i.e., the “offical” trade unions, whether in the AFL-CIO or the new split group.

At the same time, while even thoughts about organizing in the PMC in software & electronics looked totally hopeless until the 1002 bust, there are a few indications that some people in that PMC occupational category have begun to realize that their self-exploitation can’t save them either from takeovers or offshoring. A recent “event” in Silicon Valley might be a harbinbger (or maybe a false spring, of course) when th wife of one of the self-exploiters denounced her husband’s employers and shook loose a barrage of emails supporting her objections.

We’re probably in a place where the full vulnerability of most PMCers has not yet come home to roost. But with takeovers and offshoring now galloping along, some PMCers may begin more active explorations to figure out ways of protecting themselves and getting a modium of security.

Hope springs eternal!

Bill Friedland, Professor Emeritus at University of California, Santa Cruz, at 8:11 pm EDT on September 11, 2005

Eeking out a living

I must say I loved the image of timid mice pleading for scraps that the Once-Homeless Adjunct’s post conjured up, with its (perhaps unintentional) mention of adjuncts who struggle to “eek” out a living.

JMG, at 9:04 am EDT on September 15, 2005

Yeah but

Yeah but did she give any advice for HOW TO GET OUT OF WHITE COLLAR HELL or all we all just stuck here? :(

C P, Publicist at some University Press erother, at 9:09 am EDT on September 30, 2005

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