Description Keywordschronicles the rise of a new vocabulary in the twenty-first century.
From Silicon Valley to the White House, from primary school to higher education, and from the factory floor to the church pulpit, we are all called to be innovators and entrepreneurs, to be curators of an ever-expanding roster of competencies.
Think of the zealotry of the disruptive entrepreneur and the resilience of the agile thought-leader for a sense of the ideal personality traits of our time: flexible, inexhaustible, and never not at work.
Many of these words have a secret history that informs their modern usage in surprising ways--innovation was once false prophecy, and before stakeholder crossed the lips of a single non-profit director it was used by conservative economists opposed to the New Deal.
In a series of short essays on terms like entrepreneur, sustainability, artisanal, and synergy, Keywords uses the vocabulary of neoliberalism to discover the contemporary spirit of capitalism.
Each entry explores a popular term that displays an affinity for hierarchy, competition, the marketplace, and the virtual technologies of our time.
The key words all share a celebration of decisive leadership, dreamy artistry, prophetic vision, and an inexhaustible commitment to work: the pillars of an ideal innovative self.
John Patrick Leary is associate professor of English at Wayne State University in Detroit.
He is the author of A Cultural History of Underdevelopment: Latin America in the U.
Imagination (2016).
About the Author John Patrick Leary is Associate Professor of English at Wayne State University in Detroit, where he teaches nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.
and Latin American literature.
He is the author of A Cultural History of Underdevelopment: Latin America in the U.
Imagination (2016) and numerous scholarly articles and essays.
Time | Flexible inexhaustible and never not at work |
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The key words all share a celebration of decisive leadership, dreamy artistry, prophetic vision, and an inexhaustible commitment to work | The pillars of an ideal innovative self |
Underdevelopment | Latin Latin |