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Trouble with Dilbert How Corporate Culture Gets the Last Laugh

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ISBN-10: 1567511333

ISBN-13: 9781567511338

Edition: 1997

Authors: Norman Solomon, Tom Tomorrow

List price: $29.95
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Description:

Most readers assume Dilbert is on their side in a tough workaday world. But Dilbert is a fraud. Are you surprised that Dilbert's creator, Scott Adams, actually favors downsizing? Are you suspicious when Xerox uses Dilbert in its employee handbook as an offbeat sugary coating to help the corporate medicine go down? Are you tired of the sweeping portrayal of office workers as lazy idiots? Of the running gags that stay inside the moat of the corporate castle? Do you worry when rebellion and revolution are redefined as the ability to overcome corporate bureaucracy to make more money for your boss? Do you wonder why Dilbert avoids tackling so many real problems at work? If you answered yes to…    
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Book details

List price: $29.95
Copyright year: 1997
Publisher: Common Courage Press
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 180
Size: 8.00" wide x 5.50" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 0.484
Language: English

Edwin O. Reischauer was born in Japan in 1910, the son of Protestant educational-missionary parents, founders of Japan's first school for the deaf. After being educated in Japanese and American schools, he received his B.A. from Oberlin College in 1931 and his M.A. from Harvard in 1932. Four years later he received a Ph.D. in Far Eastern Languages from Harvard. In 1938 he joined the faculty at Harvard, where he rose to the position of professor and acted for an extensive period as director of the Harvard-Yenching Institute. His academic career was interrupted by World War II, during which he served as an intelligence officer in the U.S. Army, and he held civilian posts first in the War…    

Forewordp. 1
The Importance of Being Dilbertp. 7
Laughing All the Way to the Bankp. 18
A Zany Management Toolp. 28
"It's just a cartoon..."p. 45
A Humorist's View of Dilbertp. 53
The Culture of Eye-Rolling Capitulationp. 64
Reducing Stress and Boosting Profitsp. 82
"Maybe your odds are a matter of your control"p. 92
Acknowledgementsp. 102
About the Authorp. 104
Table of Contents provided by Blackwell. All Rights Reserved.