The White-Collar Century
Uitgelicht
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18,00 |
Naar shop
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48,44 |
Naar shop
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48,44 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
For seventy years, the path was clear: get a degree, get a desk job, get a stable middle-class life. Every wave of automation came for manual and routine work first. The lawyers, analysts, consultants, designers, and coders whose credentials were a moat were always the safe harbor.Generative AI is the first wave to invert that order.In The White-Collar Century, A. A. Castor traces how the professional class became the first casualty of the AI economy. Drawing on case studies from 2022 through 2026, the book follows real workers whose careers changed in months rather than decades - the junior lawyer replaced by a contract-review model, the copywriter producing for half the rate, the analyst whose team of six is now a team of one with an AI agent.But this isn't a layoffs book. The harder question runs underneath: what happens to a society built on the assumption that a degree buys a stable middle-class life? Castor follows the implications outward - to housing, marriage rates, college enrollment, the geography of cities, and the political coalitions that have always depended on a confident professional middle.The book is honest about the disruption, but it is not fatalist. It diagnoses why this wave is different (in plain English, no equations), sorts the survivors from the casualties - including some surprise winners in the trades, in care work, and in roles that demand physical presence - and closes with a sober look at what humans become valuable for when cognition is cheap. The final chapters lay out three plausible shapes for a new middle class, and what we would have to choose, starting now, to land somewhere good.For readers of A World Without Work, The Coming Wave, The Technology Trap, and Bullshit Jobs - but written from the moment after generative AI hit professional work at scale.
For seventy years, the path was clear: get a degree, get a desk job, get a stable middle-class life. Every wave of automation came for manual and routine work first. The lawyers, analysts, consultants, designers, and coders whose credentials were a moat were always the safe harbor.Generative AI is the first wave to invert that order.In The White-Collar Century, A. A. Castor traces how the professional class became the first casualty of the AI economy. Drawing on case studies from 2022 through 2026, the book follows real workers whose careers changed in months rather than decades - the junior lawyer replaced by a contract-review model, the copywriter producing for half the rate, the analyst whose team of six is now a team of one with an AI agent.But this isn't a layoffs book. The harder question runs underneath: what happens to a society built on the assumption that a degree buys a stable middle-class life? Castor follows the implications outward - to housing, marriage rates, college enrollment, the geography of cities, and the political coalitions that have always depended on a confident professional middle.The book is honest about the disruption, but it is not fatalist. It diagnoses why this wave is different (in plain English, no equations), sorts the survivors from the casualties - including some surprise winners in the trades, in care work, and in roles that demand physical presence - and closes with a sober look at what humans become valuable for when cognition is cheap. The final chapters lay out three plausible shapes for a new middle class, and what we would have to choose, starting now, to land somewhere good.For readers of A World Without Work, The Coming Wave, The Technology Trap, and Bullshit Jobs - but written from the moment after generative AI hit professional work at scale.
AmazonPagina's: 238, Paperback, A.A. Castor