(Nikil Saval was one of the people dismissed by Timothy Shenk.)

http://chronicle.com/article/Paper-Pushers/145839/

April 14, 2014
White-Collar World
What the office 
has done 
to American life

By Nikil Saval

But this white collar book: ah, there’s a book for the people; it is 
everybody’s book. … It is all about the new little man in the big world 
of the 20th century. It is about that little man and how he lives and 
what he suffers and what his chances are going to be; and it is also 
about the world he lives in, has to live, doesn’t want to live in. It 
is, as I said, going to be everybody’s book. For, in truth, who is not a 
little man?
—C. Wright Mills, 
letter to his parents (1946)

In or around the year 1956, the percentage of American workers who were 
"white collar" exceeded the percentage that were blue collar for the 
first time. Although labor statistics had long foretold this outcome, 
what the shift meant was unclear, and little theoretical work had 
prepared anyone to understand it. In the preceding years, the United 
States had quickly built itself up as an industrial powerhouse, emerging 
from World War II as the world’s leading source of manufactured goods. 
Much of its national identity was predicated on the idea that it made 
things. But thanks in part to advances in automation, job growth on the 
shop floor had slowed to a trickle. Meanwhile, the world of 
administration and clerical work, and new fields like public relations 
and marketing, grew inexorably—a paperwork empire annexing whole swaths 
of the labor force, as people exchanged assembly lines for metal desks, 
overalls for gray-flannel suits.

(clip)
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