I came
across an interesting article in The New
Yorker which I thought I’d share.
“The last
two decades have seen a boom in workplace novels written by and mostly marketed
to women, from books put out by major publishing houses, to cheaply produced
small-press books, to self-published titles. If the author is a woman,
workplace fiction is also domestic fiction, easily disguised as “chick lit,”
“girlfriend literature,” or even “erotica.” Regardless of the packaging, these
books provide mapping, contextualizing, and rich illustration of women’s
working lives. They form a kind of counter-tradition of office literature,
dealing with the same bureaucracies and white-collar doldrums that have
inspired male novelists but reflecting the particular challenges and
preoccupations of women in the workforce” (http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-office-politics-of-workplace-fiction-by-women).
The article mentions a number of books. Workplace fiction by women is a genre that is
particularly appropriate at the moment as Hillary Clinton tries to break the
ultimate glass ceiling in American politics.
And if you are missing your workplace during your summer vacation, you
might want to read one of the titles mentioned.
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