Shop Class as Soulcraft brings alive an experience that was once quite ordinary, but now seems to be receding over the cultural horizon—the experience of making and fixing things. Working with your hands, as Mathew B. Crawford describes it, connects us to the world around us. Those of us who sit in an office often have intuitions of something gone amiss, a sense of unreality accompanied by feelings of impotence. What, after all, do we do all day? In this wholly original debut, Crawford offers a brief for self-reliance and a sustained reflection on this problem: how to live concretely in an ever more abstract world. Shop Class as Soulcraft seeks to restore the honor of the manual trades as a life worth choosing for anyone who felt hustled off to college, then to the cubicle, against their own inclinations and natural bents. On both economic and psychological grounds, Crawford questions the educational imperative of turning everyone into a “knowledge worker.” This imperative, he explains, is based on a misguided separation of thinking from doing, the work of the hand from that of the mind. Crawford shows in precise detail how such a partition, which began a century ago with the assembly line, degrades work for those on both sides of the divide.
But he offers good news as well: The manual trades are very different from factory work. They require a lot of thinking and may even give rise to moments of genuine pleasure. Based on his own experience as an electrician and mechanic, Crawford makes a case for the intrinsic satisfactions and cognitive challenges— the soulcraft—of manual work. The work of builders and mechanics cannot be outsourced. They tie us to the local communities in which we live and instill the pride that comes from doing work that is genuinely useful.
Speaking squarely to a culture that continues to grapple for a way to reconcile work and life and to find fulfilling work of all stripes, Shop Class as Soulcraft offers inspired social criticism and deep personal exploration. It will change your understanding of the value of work and the work of bringing value and meaning to your life, whatever you do now or hope to do one day.
Matthew B. Crawford is a philosopher and motorcycle mechanic. After receiving a degree in physics from U.C. Santa Barbara, he worked as an electrician. He then received a Ph.D. in political philosophy from the University of Chicago and served as a postdoctoral fellow on the Committee on Social Thought, also at the University of Chicago. Crawford is currently a fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia, and he owns and operates Shockoe Moto, an independent motorcycle repair shop in Richmond, Virginia.
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专注力是这个时代所欠缺的,而工匠精神就更不用说了。最近在读《摩托车修理店未来工作哲学》让工匠精神回归。感触很深,我们的手艺人,那种死磕精神和投入,成为了这个时代所稀缺的。 点点滴滴都是修炼,敢于死磕注定成就“大事”。不妨来修炼一门手艺,做一个手艺人,让工匠...
評分 評分 評分看完本书,没有激情澎湃。说实话有很多不明白的地方,不知道是自己跟不上书本节奏还是太高深了。不过就一个道理是真的:追寻自己想要的生活。不过其他的什么理论,辩证就着实看不懂了。或许是自己思想太浅了,是在没法明白这本书。
評分专注力是这个时代所欠缺的,而工匠精神就更不用说了。最近在读《摩托车修理店未来工作哲学》让工匠精神回归。感触很深,我们的手艺人,那种死磕精神和投入,成为了这个时代所稀缺的。 点点滴滴都是修炼,敢于死磕注定成就“大事”。不妨来修炼一门手艺,做一个手艺人,让工匠...
工匠精神
评分充滿瞭男性masculinity的味道,後半部分比前半部分堪讀,想到當年工作時那種cubicle drone的感覺似曾相識,quit the job也算明智之舉。
评分究竟有多少喜歡修摩托車的哲學傢...書寫風格太像在寫哲學論文,語法復雜生僻詞用得多,讀起來有點纍。親手勞作帶來的自我價值並不是什麼新鮮主題。覺得有意思的一些論述:教育係統中勞動教育缺失的後果,藍領工作如何幫助構建一個社會的道德體係
评分勸退佳作。
评分究竟有多少喜歡修摩托車的哲學傢...書寫風格太像在寫哲學論文,語法復雜生僻詞用得多,讀起來有點纍。親手勞作帶來的自我價值並不是什麼新鮮主題。覺得有意思的一些論述:教育係統中勞動教育缺失的後果,藍領工作如何幫助構建一個社會的道德體係
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