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French Employee's Work Celebrates the Sloth Ethic
The New York Times ^ | 8/14/04 | Craig S. Smith

Posted on 08/14/2004 8:07:59 AM PDT by ppaul

PARIS, Aug. 13 - Finally, instead of dissembling behind ambiguous notions of Gallic joie de vivre, someone in this leisurely land has declared outright that the French should eschew the Anglo-Saxon work ethic and openly embrace sloth.

Corinne Maier, the author of "Bonjour Paresse," a sort of slacker manifesto whose title translates as "Hello Laziness," has become a countercultural heroine almost overnight by encouraging the country's workers to adopt her strategy of "active disengagement" - calculated loafing - to escape the horrors of disinterested endeavor.

"Imitate me, midlevel executives, white-collar workers, neo-slaves, the damned of the tertiary sector," Ms. Maier calls in her slim volume, which is quickly becoming a national best seller. She argues that France's ossified corporate culture no longer offers rank-and-file employees the prospect of success, so, "Why not spread gangrene through the system from inside?"

The book is a counterpoint to efforts by the country's center-right government to repair the damage done to French work habits by decades of Socialist administration, which enacted a 35-hour workweek. It is gaining in popularity just as the International Monetary Fund is urging Europeans to work longer and harder to stiffen their soft economies.

The French already work less than people in most other developed countries - on average, nearly 300 fewer hours a year than Americans, according to one study.

In many ways, Ms. Maier is typical of France's intelligentsia, overeducated and underemployed. She studied economics and international relations at the country's elite National Foundation of Political Sciences, or Sciences-Po, before earning a doctorate in psychoanalysis.

But she works just 20 hours a week writing dry economic reports at the state electric utility, Électricité de France, for which she is paid about $2,000 a month. Sitting in the living room of her Left Bank apartment, decorated with colorful abstract art, huge stereo speakers and a bicycle, Ms. Maier, 40, insists that her polemic, though tongue in cheek, has a principled point. "Can we work in a corporation and contest the system," she asks, "or must we be blind and docile and adhere to everything that the corporation says?"

Part of the problem, according to Ms. Maier, is that French companies are frozen by strict social norms.

"Everything depends on what school you went to and what diploma you have," she said, arguing that advancement is slow and comes less from ambition than from endurance. "French corporations," she says, "are not meritocracies."

Workers remain at their jobs until retirement, stymieing the promotion of those below them, she argues, yet a system of patronage and stiff legal protections make it difficult for employers to fire anyone. Years of such stagnation in France's hierarchy-obsessed society have produced elaborate rituals to keep people busy.

"Work is organized a little like the court of Louis XIV, very complicated and very ritualized so that people feel they are working effectively when they are not," she said.

Her solution? Rather than keep up what she sees as an exhausting charade, people who dislike what they do should, as she puts it, discreetly disengage. If done correctly - and her book gives a few tips, such as looking busy by always carrying a stack of files - few co-workers will notice, and those who do will be too worried about rocking the boat to complain. Given the difficulty of firing employees, she says, frustrated superiors are more likely to move such subversive workers up than out.

The book's title is a play on "Bonjour Tristesse," the title of the 1954 best-selling novel by Françoise Sagan that recounted a worldly young woman's cynical approach to relationships and sex. Ms. Maier's book, subtitled "The Art and Necessity of Doing the Least Possible in a Corporation," is concerned with a more mundane malaise.

With chapters titled "The Morons Who Are Sitting Next To You" and "Beautiful Swindles," it declares that corporate culture is nothing more than the "crystallization of the stupidity of a group of people at a given moment."

Her employer of 12 years was not amused. Irritated that she identified herself as an Électricité de France employee on the back cover of her book, company officials wrote her a stern letter accusing her of inattention at meetings, leaving work early and "spreading gangrene from within," just as her book advocates. They demanded that she appear for a disciplinary hearing, though the original Aug. 17 date has been pushed back to September. That's because Ms. Maier is going on vacation.

"They want to make an example of me," Ms. Maier said.

When she received the letter from her employer, she did what any French worker would do: she took it to the company union and asked them to help in her defense. The union, already engaged in a bitter battle with management over a partial privatization scheme, took the case to the news media, where it received instant and widespread attention.

Without the company's maneuver, Ms. Maier's book would probably have quietly gone out of print. Instead, her publisher, Éditions Michalon, sold out the first printing of 4,000 copies and has ordered three successive reprints in the past three months: 15,000 copies have been printed so far and, having apparently struck a chord with the country's work force, demand only appears to be growing.

She said the reaction of co-workers has been mixed, with some outraged by her thankless attitude. "They think it scandalous," she said, "like I spit in my soup."



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: federalemployees; france; french; frogs; johnfrenchiekerry; johnkerry; kery; labor; laziness; paris; sloth; stateemployees; unions; workethic
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In many ways, Ms. Maier is typical of France's intelligentsia, overeducated and underemployed...Workers remain at their jobs until retirement, stymieing the promotion of those below them, she argues, yet a system of patronage and stiff legal protections make it difficult for employers to fire anyone.

Sounds like the U.S. federal and state gubbamint employees.


1 posted on 08/14/2004 8:07:59 AM PDT by ppaul
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To: ppaul
If you look at John Kerrys lack of voting records and read this, you'd fiugre John Kerrys running for the wrong country.

VOTE JOHN KERRY! LABOR LEADER TO THE FRENCH 2004!

Bush/Cheney '04- antisocialism canidates!

2 posted on 08/14/2004 8:18:21 AM PDT by AmericanCheeseFood (Zing!)
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To: ppaul
The book is a counterpoint to efforts by the country's center-right government to repair the damage done to French work habits by decades of Socialist administration, which enacted a 35-hour workweek.

Wow, how did that tidbit of truth sneak past the Socialist cadre at the Times? Some hapless editor is going to get their butt kicked for allowing that sentence into print...

3 posted on 08/14/2004 8:20:31 AM PDT by Zeppo
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To: ppaul

Might help explain why that airport terminal collapsed. "Gangrene from within."


4 posted on 08/14/2004 8:22:36 AM PDT by edweena
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To: ppaul
She has some good points about the corporate structure, especially her nod to the Dilbert Principle (the incompetent will thrive and rise to the top in a corporate environment), but I think this factoid about the woman is telling:

In many ways, Ms. Maier is typical of France's intelligentsia, overeducated and underemployed. She studied economics and international relations at the country's elite National Foundation of Political Sciences, or Sciences-Po, before earning a doctorate in psychoanalysis.

Underemployed? I would think unemployable with credentials like that. What does she expect out of life? She's basically studied herself into a life of extreme uselessness. No wonder she got bored and rebelled.

5 posted on 08/14/2004 8:24:36 AM PDT by randog (What the....?!)
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To: ppaul
"Everything depends on what school you went to and what diploma you have," she said, arguing that advancement is slow and comes less from ambition than from endurance. "French corporations," she says, "are not meritocracies." Workers remain at their jobs until retirement, stymieing the promotion of those below them, she argues, yet a system of patronage and stiff legal protections make it difficult for employers to fire anyone. Years of such stagnation in France's hierarchy-obsessed society have produced elaborate rituals to keep people busy.

I guess it is hard to be motivated under those circumstances.

Her employer of 12 years was not amused. Irritated that she identified herself as an Électricité de France employee on the back cover of her book, company officials wrote her a stern letter accusing her of inattention at meetings, leaving work early and "spreading gangrene from within," just as her book advocates. They demanded that she appear for a disciplinary hearing, though the original Aug. 17 date has been pushed back to September. That's because Ms. Maier is going on vacation.

LOL! They proved her point; doesn't sound like she's going to get fired.

Her solution? Rather than keep up what she sees as an exhausting charade, people who dislike what they do should, as she puts it, discreetly disengage. If done correctly - and her book gives a few tips, such as looking busy by always carrying a stack of files - few co-workers will notice, and those who do will be too worried about rocking the boat to complain. Given the difficulty of firing employees, she says, frustrated superiors are more likely to move such subversive workers up than out.

Reminds me of my brief employment at the IRS...
6 posted on 08/14/2004 8:34:54 AM PDT by Welsh Rabbit
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To: ppaul

My brother goes to France a few times a year for his job and he told me everytime he meets someone new either at a party or a club they always say they have a job that people here would consider hobbies. "I`m a painter - I collect coins - I`m a gardener - I play guitar - I`m a sculptor - I breed cats" Don`t know if it`s true like that for everyone in France, but if it is, I don`t know how the hell that country functions.


7 posted on 08/14/2004 9:05:52 AM PDT by Imaverygooddriver (Never forget: "We will take things away from you for the benefit of the common good"-Hitlery Rodham)
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To: ppaul

This is one of the reasons why France will probably be an Islamic state in about 20 years. The immigrants from Muslim countries probably are working a lot harder and they won't have to worry about any resistance.


8 posted on 08/14/2004 9:19:39 AM PDT by Wonderama
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To: ppaul
for which she is paid about $2,000 a month.

2 gees can't go far in France. She must have a poorer lifestyle than most working class families in the U.S. Ah well, to each their own.

9 posted on 08/14/2004 9:24:08 AM PDT by jordan8
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To: ppaul

It doesn't seem like they need much encouragement.


10 posted on 08/14/2004 9:27:34 AM PDT by Unam Sanctam
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To: randog

Underemployed? I would think unemployable with credentials like that. What does she expect out of life? She's basically studied herself into a life of extreme uselessness. No wonder she got bored and rebelled.

She wouldn't work for me. Professional students is what we called them when I was a kid. They kept changing their majors in college and never seems to graduate or have enough credits in any one course to be employable and knowledgeable in anything. Most of them had parents that were just well off enough to carry this on for years. I have one friend who is very smart, but I cannot feature him ever working for anyone. He whips out his superior "education" at every opportunity and leaves you feeling totally inadequate. Meanwhile, I often wonder how he would have survived so nicely if it weren't for his parents investments.


11 posted on 08/14/2004 9:41:33 AM PDT by ridesthemiles (ridesthemiles)
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To: AmericanCheeseFood

f you look at John Kerrys lack of voting records and read this, you'd fiugre John Kerrys running for the wrong country.

VOTE JOHN KERRY! LABOR LEADER TO THE FRENCH 2004!



Ok! Who's got the French John Kerry Photo? Please repost!!


12 posted on 08/14/2004 10:17:13 AM PDT by texson66 ("Tyranny is yielding to the lust of the governing." - Lord Moulton)
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To: texson66
Ok! Who's got the French John Kerry Photo? Please repost!!

Ok, here ya go.


13 posted on 08/14/2004 10:21:26 AM PDT by OldCorps
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To: texson66
BTW, you might also enjoy this thread I started here on FreeRepublic:

Post Your Girlie Man Kerry Photos Here

Its full of some reallllllly great photos.

14 posted on 08/14/2004 10:23:43 AM PDT by OldCorps
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To: ppaul
How I hate socialism. My ex-sister-in-law, a Belgian, told me: "Why should I work? The government pays me and, if I work, I would get very little more than I do now."

This capitalist was appalled. Socialism goes against human nature- it's unfair and it eventually collapses.

15 posted on 08/14/2004 10:29:40 AM PDT by austingirl
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To: ppaul

bttfl


16 posted on 08/14/2004 10:33:56 AM PDT by Cacique (quos Deus vult perdere, prius dementat)
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To: ppaul
New York Times channels Wonkette
17 posted on 08/14/2004 10:36:53 AM PDT by gcruse (http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
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To: edweena

In fact, this article makes me happy. Someone, afterall, is performing the logical next step of fully dismantling all vestiges of the free-market, capitalist environment in France after decades of pretensions. I cannot wait for France to be a thoroughly backward turd world nation, like its former colony Algeria, with its few remaining competitive and profitable multinationals finding it impossible to sustain operations in al-France.


18 posted on 08/14/2004 10:37:24 AM PDT by nwrep
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To: OldCorps
John French Kerry

Oh, ze moustache, zo sex-ee! (/sarcasm)

19 posted on 08/14/2004 10:40:01 AM PDT by Ciexyz ("FR, best viewed with a budgie on hand")
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To: ppaul; All
The author is fugly:


20 posted on 08/14/2004 10:40:32 AM PDT by nwrep
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