The obscure poem ‘I Love my job’, written by famous virtuoso Dr Suess, explores the truth behind a typical office job. Similar to his other works, Suess writes his poem with a twist; he decides to use the power of sarcasm to convey his message. The first five stanzas of the poem leads the reader to assume that Seuss is applying a level of sarcasm, alongside increasing levels of dramatism. The reader would substitute the word "hate" for "love" and it would seem accurate. Due to the formation of modern society, it is assumed that nobody realistically loves their job or doing chores. However, the end of the fourth stanza suggests something interesting: the narrator says that he would love his programmes and files more if they worked. Here, substituting
In Miya Tokumitsu’s article “In the Name of Love,” she expresses the notion of how doing what you love in the line of work is selfish, and is a form of distraction for the actual work at hand. She derives that an issue of DWYL is that it is based around the idea of thinking only about oneself, instead of those around them. She explains that there are two sides to this issue, and that people tend to forget the side of people that are forced to work low-end jobs just to suffice enough money for their families to survive. A major points she includes is how DWYL distinguishes class lines, and she draws attention to the features that make up both. She also contradicts the typical idea of passion and the order that it follows, by saying how it is
Although the narrator did not enjoy the jobs she had, she did not dislike them either. She greatly disliked her job as a telemarketer, selling TV subscriptions over the phone. But like most people, the narrator settled for the jobs to make a living and support herself. In the poem, the narrator states that their favorite job was working at a donut shop. “I liked the donut shop best, 3 AM,/alone in the kitchen, surrounded/ by sugar and squat mounds of dough,” (29-31). From this quote, the reader can infer that the reason the narrator enjoyed this job because she is alone while
Terrance Hayes’ poem, Mr. T is about a 1980’s pop icon and it describes his place in African American history. The poem starts out describing Mr. T but it soon becomes stern when it asks serious questions and then answers mockingly about this pop icons absurdity.
“A poem is true if it hangs together. Information points to something else. A poem points to nothing but itself” this quote by E.M. Forster alludes to the concept of metafiction in poetry as a whole. According to the Penguin Dictionary of Literary Terms, “Metafiction is a kind of fiction that self-consciously addresses the devices of fiction…[M]etafiction does not let the readers forget they are reading a work of fiction.” Some common metafictive strategies include a story about someone writing a story, a piece of fiction that references specific conventions of a story, or characters that are aware they are in a story or work of fiction. The poems, “Functional Poem by Mark Halliday and “The Poem You Asked For” by Larry Levis, embody various conceptions metafiction.
We all know that most people hate their jobs. Work is seen as something we have to do, and very lucky few seem to find a job that we enjoy. How we feel about work, and what we do for a living, in many ways helps to define who we are and who we are going to become. Having seen actual people share their perspectives and view points on “working for a living” helps us see ourselves and rethink our future. Overall, Studs Terkel helps flash- back into America's history and see the changes that America ans it’s people have gone through.
Nearly everyone has had that dreadful encounter with the last person they want to see in places like the supermarket, dry cleaners, or the movie theaters. What follows are a few awkward moments of strained conversation while one looks for signs of bitter regret in the eyes of his or her ex. Carolyn Krizer’s poem “Bitch” depicts such a meeting. The poem brings the reader to reality of what really goes on deep beyond conversation while seeing an ex. Through the use of personification, diction, and tone Kizer delineates the speaker’s struggle with feelings of animosity, repression, and desire for reconciliation.
The poem describes workers to be “Killing the overtime ‘cause the dream is your life, / Refusing to take holidays or go home to your spouse, / But for many the overtime comes, ‘cause the work is not done. / Deadlines to be met. So you continue to dream like a war vet, / Having flashbacks to make you shiver and scream” (Jones, stanza 7, lines 2-6). Jones reinforces that overworking for an incentive of money does not give one a sense of gratification, and it also distracts them from the values that should matter more to them than anything else. Both Kohn and Jones have a similar approach to showing the reader the effect that overworking can have on a person, and how it will change their values in life, causing unhappiness. Many students go through school dispirited and do not join various clubs and activities for their own enjoyment. A friend of Kohn’s who was also a high school guidance counsellor had a student with ‘…amazing grade and board scores. It remained only to knock out a dazzling essay on his college applications that would clinch the sale. “Why don’t we start with some books that
The concluding couplet, "what did I know/ of love's austere and lonely offices?” loops back to “No one ever thanked him”, in that his father did back breaking work and no one regarded his work. Austere means in a cold manner, while the word "offices" means duties. The speaker did not realize his father’s sacrifices until now, as an adult, and didn’t thank his father for his love. The title is a good fit for the poem because the entirety of the poem is about Sundays in winter during the speaker’s childhood. The poem is composed of three stanzas of f...
Currently, human beings are thinking more on the line of they need work in order to make a living. For that reason, work has become meaningless, disagreeable, and unnatural. Many view work as a way to obtain money and not a meaningful human activity that one does for themselves. The author states that there are two reactions of the alienated and profoundly unsatisfactory character of the modern industrial work. One being the ideal of complete laziness and the other, hostility towards work. Fromm believes the reason why people have animosity regarding work is due to their unconscious mind. Subconsciously, a person has “a deep-seated, hostility towards work and all that is connected to it” says Fromm. I believe what Fromm is saying to be true, after all I witness it everyday. Millions of people each day goes to a work which they are dissatisfied with and that can negatively impact their attitude
In the poem, The Boss is Back, written by Victoria Chang originates from her collection of poems in The Boss upon the hardships of office life. The continuous rhythm demonstrates the endless assigned tasks and projects given at the office, where breaks are nonexistent. Suffocation and anxiety are the main feelings of what how the persona feels. Overall, the persona contrasts between the rewards in good grades and how her boss fires the employees regardless of their performance. From the first stanza to the second stanza, the persona transitions between her identity of a mother and an employee implies how her work and personal identities are interconnected.
The poem, “What Work Is” by Philip Levine is an intricate and thought-provoking selection. Levine uses a slightly confusing method of describing what work actually is. He gives the idea that work is very tedious, however necessary. It is miserable, however, it is a sacrifice that is essentially made by many, if not all able-bodied members of society. Many have to sacrifice going to a concert or a movie, but instead works jobs with hardly a manageable salary. This poem seems to have a focus on members of the lower-class or middle-class who live paycheck to paycheck and are unable to put money away for a future for their children or for a vacation and how difficult life can be made to be while living under this type of circumstance. Levine
We're all guilty of occasionally thinking about work when we're off the clock or letting something related to work ruin our day. But, normally we are able to separate our work lives from our personal lives. For the group of friends in this comedic film, they are unable to relinquish their work personas and this has affected everything from the way they interact with each other to the marriage of one of the friends.
“enriching certain elements of jobs alters people’s psychological states in a manner that enhances their work effectiveness.” (Lunenburg,
For example, Hopkins defined problem satisfaction as the fulfillment or satisfaction of certain needs that were associated with one’s study ” Specter defined job satisfaction, in plain words, as “the extent to which people like their chore ”. Job satisfaction has been defined as a positive orientation course of an individual toward the work role, which he or she is presently occupying an assortment of component can influence a single level of occupation gratification. Some of those factors include pay grade, the process of promotion, workings conditions, leadership, sociable relationship, and the job itself. Job satisfaction is defined as the pleasurable emotional state resulting from the appraisal of a mortal ’s task as achieving or facilitating the individual’s values. Both satisfaction or dissatisfaction are seen as a function of perceived relationship between what an individual wants from his or her task and what that individual perceive it as offering or entailing. Thus, “job satisfaction is an attitude which reflects the degree to which an individual is satisfied, gratified, or fulfilled in his or her work or job” (Sharma, Verma, Verma, & Malhotra, 2010, p. 349). Overall, job satisfaction is a multidimensional
Usually, work is considered to be paid employment. As suggested by Watson (2012), people do series of tasks as work to make them living within the society and economic context. Besides by paid, work is important to humanity. Kohn and Schooler (1983) indicated that where work has substantive complexity where puts an improvement in mental flexibility and self-esteem. Applebaum (1992) also considered that work helps people to contact with social reality and self-status. For example, people may establish different relationships with their colleagues; employees might establish different attitudes towards jobs they like and hate. Another view of work emphasizes that ‘work’ not only includes paid work, but also includes unpaid work and some community