Monday, January 18, 2010

Bartleby: The First American 'Office Space' Drama?


Melville's "Bartleby the Scrivener" presents the first known mention of a cubicle-like office space in American literature. The cubicle in its present form made its appearance in 1968, the invention of Robert Propst -- who lived to regret his invention despite the fact that it made him millions. It is now a $3 billion per year business. Before he died Propst denounced and disowned the invention, calling it "monolithic insanity" among other epithets.

Dilbert

Here's a 2006 article called "Trapped in Cubicles," published in Fortune magazine:
Robert Oppenheimer agonized over building the A-bomb. Alfred Nobel got queasy about creating dynamite. Robert Propst invented nothing so destructive. Yet before he died in 2000, he lamented his unwitting contribution to what he called "monolithic insanity."

Propst is the father of the cubicle. More than 30 years after he unleashed it on the world, we are still trying to get out of the box. The cubicle has been called many things in its long and terrible reign. But what it has lacked in beauty and amenity, it has made up for in crabgrass-like persistence.

Reviled by workers, demonized by designers, disowned by its very creator, it still claims the largest share of office furniture sales--$3 billion or so a year--and has outlived every "office of the future" meant to replace it. It is the Fidel Castro of office furniture.

So will the cubicle always be with us? Probably yes, though in recent years individuals and organizations have finally started to chart productive and economical ways to escape its tyranny.

Continue reading article...

Cubicle office life has been the comic and tragic-comic subject of some contemporary entertainments such as the cartoon Dilbert and a recent movie called Office Space. The movie features a character named Milton, a guy who was laid off, but didn’t know it and kept working at the company even when they corrected a clerical error that kept paying him. Here's an interesting tidbit from the real world: A story from New Jersey is basically the opposite of that. Anthony Armatys accepted a job at a telecom company called Avaya in 2002, then changed his mind. However, he’d already been added to the company payroll, and it didn’t occur to anyone to take him off of it. Five years later,in 2007, someone finally realized Armatys had been collecting a paycheck for not working. He pleaded guilty to a count of theft as part of a plea bargain.

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