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      Willing Slaves

      How the Overwork Culture is Ruling Our Lives

      Madeleine Bunting

      To Simon

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Part Two The Slavedrivers: Who’s Making us Work so Hard?

       4 Missionary Management

       5 Government, the Hard Taskmaster

       Part Three Why Do We Do it?

       6 You’re on Your Own

       Part Four The Human Cost

       7 Keeping Body and Soul Together

       8 The Care Deficit

       9 An Unfinished Revolution

       Part Five What Can be Done?

       10 In Our Own Time

       11 The Politics of Well-Being

       Notes

       Bibliography

       Index

       Acknowledgements

       P.S.

       About the author

       About the Author

       Questioning the World

       LIFE at a Glance

       FAVOURITE BOOKS

       A Writing Life

       About the book

       A New Generation

       Read on

       Have You Read?

       If You Loved This, You Might Like…

       Find Out More

       Praise

       By the same author

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Introduction

      The starting point for this book has been readers of my column in the Guardian. Whenever I touched on the subject of overwork, I would be overwhelmed by the volume and emotion of the emails I received in response. It was like a burst water main – a torrent of anger, bewilderment and sometimes despair. Here was a source of deep frustration beneath the surface which fitted awkwardly into the public space allocated to it in the national conversation. ‘Work-life balance’ was an inadequate label for the set of issues which stirred these passionate emails and letters. When I started researching the book, one of the first things I did was to set up a column on the Guardian’s website called ‘Working Lives’. I appealed to readers for their experiences, opinions and ideas on how things could change. The response was astonishing, as the emails poured in on every aspect of their work. Few of them, if any, could be put down merely to the sender’s grumbles about his or her job; I made a point of steering clear of individual injustices to focus on the mainstream. The underlying theme was the sheer invasive dominance of work in people’s lives, and the price it exacted on their health and happiness.

      ‘It’s not that I completely hate my job, it does have its good points. It’s just the amount of my valuable time that it takes up. Employers these days want blood, and if you’re not prepared to give it, you’re not part of the “team”. Our society should learn to relax more and stop working as slaves to the “economy”. It’s time to call a halt to this never-ending pursuit for more and more money. It’s time to reclaim our lives back from the so-called “employers” and it’s time to start living our lives as they should be lived, more life, less work,’ wrote a storeman in Hertfordshire.

      His sentiments were echoed by an engineer who compared German and British working practices and concluded that the latter had ‘taught me that left to their own devices, companies will happily take your lifeblood’.

      A civil servant from Yorkshire wrote that ‘I enjoy what I do and I work hard. But, and it is a growing but, I feel owned and more so every day. Due to all the mission statements, “values”, imposed ways of behaving and having to be always get-at-able (you must be accessible by mobile phone, must give an address when you are on leave, must leave a number when you are at meetings…) I feel that I have no privacy left.’

      A woman in the oil industry in Scotland wrote, ‘Over the past ten years I have seen large companies continuously cut back on staff, whilst still expecting the same quality of work. Being thirty-something, our circle of friends are in a similar age group, starting families and suffering the same strain of long hours and not enough time with their families. Don’t

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