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Supercorporate

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What should South Korean offices look like in a post-hierarchical world? In Supercorporate, anthropologist Michael M. Prentice examines a central tension in visions of big corporate life in South K...
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  • 14 June 2022
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What should South Korean offices look like in a post-hierarchical world? In Supercorporate, anthropologist Michael M. Prentice examines a central tension in visions of big corporate life in South Korea's twenty-first century: should corporations be sites of fair distinction or equal participation?

As South Korea distances itself from images and figures of a hierarchical past, Prentice argues that the drive to redefine the meaning of corporate labor echoes a central ambiguity around corporate labor today. Even as corporations remain idealized sites of middle-class aspiration in South Korea, employees are torn over whether they want greater recognition for their work or meaningful forms of cooperation. Through an in-depth ethnography of the Sangdo Group conglomerate, the book examines how managers attempt to perfect corporate social life through new office programs while also minimizing the risks of creating new hierarchies. Ultimately, this book reveals how office life is a battleground for working out the promises and the perils of economic democratization in one of East Asia's most dynamic countries.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 248
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Series: Culture and Economic Life
Publication Date: 14 June 2022
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503631878
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"A major ethnographic study, Supercorporate offers a rare glimpse into the social world within a corporation where far more than economic production takes place. Readers will be struck by the book's far-reaching implications for comprehending the conflicts between hierarchy and democracy."—Greg Urban, University of Pennsylvania
Michael M. Prentice is Lecturer in Korean Studies at the School of East Asian Studies, University of Sheffield.
Introduction
1. A New Tower
2. Infrastructures of Distinction
3. Old Spirits of Capitalism
4. Surveying Sangdo
5. Interrupting Democracy
6. Virtual Escapes
Conclusion: Hidden Distinctions
Methodological Appendix