Bottom text
theory book club is a good idea, and might encourage me to actually read some more.
Me too - I voted for it in the book club poll and am part way through. I'd be down for a discussion.
Debt.
Bullshit Jobs was originally an article that got way too popular so he made it a book. The book is interminable and padded all to hell as a result. The article gets the same point across easier and better.
Debt is a tour de force, it's insanely good.
Utopia of Rules is also ok, and worth reading before BS jobs if you want more.
i really like both maybe debt is more intersting. i tought debt was hard to get through so i just listened to the audiobook
I'd say Debt first since it lays the foundation for where we are now.
Debt! It covers so much interesting ground and is probably more challenging but I honestly couldn't get in to bullshit jobs. Utopia of Rules is also a less intimidating place to start and is incredibly good.
Utopia of Rules is also kind of the conceptual underpinning for Bullshit Jobs.
Well that's neither then since I'm not in the mood for either a b.s. job or debt
If you have a Marxist theoretical background (whatever that is) I suggest passing those two very relevant books for something else instead:
His "Towards an anthropological theory of value" (or however its called at libgen). It does try to revise Marx theory by building up onto smart "women-anthropologists" before him and to search about how value is generated in money less societies and how everyday-interaction does produce and reproduce society and as such value concepts.
I understood what was written as kind of a good lense to look at his other works in some situations. Also it can be read on a weekend and is pretty clear (unlike Marx).
I have a bullshit job so that book spoke to me, but debt is the go to.
bullshit jobs is good, but it's filled with a lot of testimonies from people with bullshit jobs, which make the book a lot longer than it probably should be. the fundamental substance of the book can be described in probably a few dozen pages but it's 300+ pages in total. I still think it's pretty interesting.
haven't read debt so I can't comment on that
Debt winner plus Nakoichi helpfully linked a free version of it