首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
American Karoshi (过劳死) Workaholics(工作狂)in America A thin, 40-something man with scattered white hair and wan(苍白的)complex
American Karoshi (过劳死) Workaholics(工作狂)in America A thin, 40-something man with scattered white hair and wan(苍白的)complex
admin
2013-06-17
115
问题
American Karoshi (过劳死)
Workaholics(工作狂)in America
A thin, 40-something man with scattered white hair and wan(苍白的)complexion looked up from his notebook in a church basement on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.
"Hi, I’m Emerson," he said, "and I’m addicted to work."
"Hi, Emerson," answered his companions.
Emerson is a lecturer at a major university in the New York area. In addition to his course load, he developed two new classes last semester, submitted a book-length manuscript for publication and served as executive director of a small not-for-profit corporation. "In my own eyes I’m a lazy sloth(懒惰的人)," he declared. He even agonized over coming to this evening’s Workaholics Anonymous meeting. He couldn’t shake the thought of running home to update his telephone list. "I just feel compelled to do this," he said. "It’s insanity."
What makes workaholics of America
Emerson is not alone. His condition is a product of the society that surrounds him. Joan Feldman of an investment firm in Tower 2 of the World Trade Center barely got out of the building after the first airliner crashed into Tower 1 on 11 September. While hurrying down the stairs from the 88th floor, she heard an announcement over the Center’s public-address system ordering employees back to work. "I would be dead," said Ms Feldman when asked what would have happened if she had obeyed.
America’s obsession with work has reached epidemic proportions, according to Dr Bryan E. Robinson, family therapist and author of the 1998 book, Chained to the Desk (New York University Press). He believes that workaholism is a disease that kills people and ruins families. In New York, time is money, and since one’s worth is measured by ability to earn, overwork isn’t just a good idea, it’s the law of supply and demand. According to psychiatrist Dr Jay B. Rohrlich, in Hollywood where one’s appearance is paramount(至高无上的), the same problems might manifest themselves in anorexia(厌食症). But in New York, where working excessively to achieve success is the norm, people go overboard. "When your drive controls you, instead of you controlling it, it can be the sign of underlying problems," he points out.
That equation is reinforced by new technologies which make workaholics of all of us. When Marilyn Machlowitz wrote Workaholics in 1980, things were very different. "We didn’t have faxes, cell phones, cell phones with e-mail, beepers, Palm Pilots. Workaholics used to be the people who would work anytime, anywhere. What has changed is that it has become the norm to be on call 24/7. Now that’s something that doesn’t cause anyone to blink. Globalization has really changed a lot of our work habits." People in the financial industry check in with London when they arrive for work in the morning and don’t stop until the Nikkei(日经指数)starts up at eight or nine in the evening. "The demand has increased to a point where it may be faster than people are hardwired(日经指数) to handle. And we haven’t seen all that high-tech has to offer yet, either." Twenty years ago we had enforced downtime, noted Ms Machlowitz: "If we had to send a draft of a document to someone, we had time before they received it in the mail, read it and mailed it back demanding changes. That time has collapsed to nothing. ’Right away’ has a new definition."
A study on workaholics
A study recently conducted by the health insurer Oxford Health Plans found that one in five Americans show up for work whether they’re ill, injured or have a medical appointment. This same obsession keeps one in five Americans from taking their vacation — a failure which has been found to put individuals at risk of early death. "Vacationitis (假日病)" may come from fear of returning to find someone else at your desk, or the idea that everything will collapse in your absence.
Workaholics Anonymous(无名氏工作儿) meeting publishes a list of telltale signs including: working more than 40 hours a week; taking work with you to bed, on weekends and on vacation; talking about work more than any other subject; believing its’ okay to work long hours if you love what you do; thinking about working while driving, falling asleep or when others are talking.
To New Yorkers, of course, these are simply the habits of successful people. The International Labor Office released findings that after passing the Japanese as the world’s most overworked population in the mid-1990s, Americans have pulled way ahead of the pack. Americans now work an average of 1, 979 hours a year, about three-and-a-half weeks more than the Japanese, six-and-a-half weeks more than the British and about twelve-and-a-half weeks more than their German counterparts.
Patrick Cleary of the National Association of Manufacturers told the New York Times, "We don’t see this necessarily as bad news at all," pointing out that the increase in hours coincided with a strong economic performance. Companies often compensate for America’s chronic shortage of skilled laborers with demands of forced overtime. But while an inflated salary can dull the pains of overwork, excessive job stress can cause permanent degenerative(不断恶化的)damage to the heart.
Workaholics deserve more attention
In Japan, if a ,salary man" is found slumped over his keyboard in the morning, it triggers survivors to call for a Karoshi investigation to determine whether the death was caused by overwork. In New York the coroner(验尸官)would call the same condition heart failure.
Cardiac disease (心脏病)is a complex malady affected by diet, activity, smoking, drinking and stress —and it occurs in epidemic proportions in the US. But coroners and judges refuse to entertain the notion that inordinate work stress can cause death. "If someone is working 14 hours a day, that person is not going to be eating right," said one physician at New York’s Beth Israel Medical Center, who asked that his name not be revealed. "They’re not going to have time for a nice home-cooked meal. That means fast food and increased cholesterol (胆固醇). Secondly, the time constraints will not permit them to exercise. And if the person is a workaholic, often they’re going to be a smoker or, if they’re really stressed out, a drinker."
An explosion in karoshi cases accompanied Japan’s economic boom in the early 1980s. Since karoshi was legally recognized in the 1980s, 30,000 Japanese have been diagnosed as victims. The large number of work-related deaths spurred Tokyo to legislate a national pension system for surviving members of karoshi victims’ families. But Washington continues to fail to react to such stimuli.
US courts give no money to damage claims by overworked Americans. The law seems to suggest that if everyone is overworked to the point of debilitation(虚弱), none therefore warrants compensation. This makes America’s Protestant work ethic a Puritan plague and affirms anthropologist Marshall Sahlins’s comment that the market system has handed down to human beings a sentence of "life at hard labor".
The author believes that new technologies contribute to the workaholics of modern people.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/t607777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
AgriculturalexpertshavelaunchedalandandwatermanagementprojectintheMiddleEast.Theprojectseekstoincreasefood【B1
A、Theexcitementofhunting.B、Thebeautyofnature.C、Therelaxationoffishing.D、Theprotectionofendangeredspecies.A
【S1】【S5】
A、It’sugly.B、It’sexpensive.C、Itdoesharmtotheskin.D、Itmaydropoffhisheadanytime.Dtoupee的意思是“男子假发”,当女士建议男士戴假发时,男士说
A、Computerscanbringfinancialproblems.B、Computerscanbringunemployment.C、Computerscanbeveryusefulinfamilies.D、Comp
Beforethe1850’s,theUnitedStateshadanumberofsmallcolleges,mostofthemdatingfromcolonialdays.Theyweresmall,ch
A、Picturetaking.B、Memory.C、Languagelearning.D、Poemwriting.B主旨题。本文介绍记忆力。通过浏览选项可知,本题考的可能是事实判断题或者推理题,这就要求考生在听录音的时候,特别关注选项所示
Oneday,drought(干旱)maybeathingofthepastatleastincoastalcities.Vastareasofdesertthroughouttheworldmayforthe
WhowontheWorldCup1994footballgame?WhathappenedattheUnitedNations?Howdidthecritics【C1】______thenewplay?Just
A、One.B、Two.C、Three.D、Four.C细节推断题。男士向女士借车是为了周日和女朋友一起去看机器人展览,女士最后决定和他们一起去。对话结束时,女士说她周日先去接男士,再去接男士的女朋友。由此可知,周日去看机器人展览的一共有三个人。
随机试题
休克早期,下列哪一项描述是错误的()
生产浸出制剂时,粉碎的目的是为了
建筑基坑支护采用重力式水泥土墙,水泥土搅拌桩数量为500根,用钻芯法检测其单轴抗压强度时,检测数量至少为()根。
以下事项中,符合谨慎性原则要求的有()。
邮政企业和快递企业应当及时、妥善处理用户对服务质量提出的异议。用户对处理结果不满意的,可以向邮政管理部门申诉,邮政管理部门应当及时依法处理,并白接到申诉之日起()日内作出答复。
(2018年)2015年4月,甲公司与乙建筑公司(以下简称“乙公司”)签订写字楼建筑工程总承包合同。双方约定:工程造价4000万元,工期一年。合同签订后,甲公司依约先行支付2000万元工程款,剩余2000万元在工程竣工合格后一次付清。2015年5
以下是某老师关于《戏曲与美术——变“脸”》这节美术课的教学片段:【片段1】教师播放川剧《变脸》视频片段,营造情境,带领学生走进中国戏曲文化。教师引导学生思考一个人能变出这么多不同脸谱的原因,由此引出本节课主题——脸谱。【片段2】①脸谱的色彩游戏
①调侃既是一种形式,又是一种方式,但它更是一种眼光,的处世哲学。。②语言的调侃,多半是以作品人物语言的方式出现,或也兼有叙述语言的调侃。③新近文学作品中,人物语言的调侃可谓丰富多彩。普通人的喜怒哀乐,普通人的无可奈何与百无聊赖,以口语、俚
Duringthepastgeneration,theAmericanmiddle-classfamilythatoncecouldcountonhardworkandfairplaytokeepitselffin
TheEnglishteacherbecameangry,becauseofher(absent)______fromschoolforseveraldays.
最新回复
(
0
)