Eric Abrahamson (2) (1958–)
Autore di La forza del disordine: i benefici nascosti del caos: dall'economia globale alla vita quotidiana
Per altri autori con il nome Eric Abrahamson, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.
Sull'Autore
Eric Abrahamson is Professor of Management at Columbia Business School in New York City and an internationally recognized expert on change management.
Opere di Eric Abrahamson
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Abrahamson, Eric
- Data di nascita
- 1958
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- USA
- Attività lavorative
- professor (management)
- Organizzazioni
- Columbia Business School
Utenti
Recensioni
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 2
- Utenti
- 789
- Popolarità
- #32,272
- Voto
- 3.4
- Recensioni
- 27
- ISBN
- 32
- Lingue
- 10
anyhow, i am glad i have continued because of the neat take-down of New Urbanism between pages 202 and 206.
"What a dense, stylish urban environment and its predominantly residential outer rings do not provide...are what most of the 36 percent of Americans who are currently raising children...want"
'They're building ephermeral cities for the nomadic rich'
.....
why this book has inspired current reading notes and others have not, i do not know.
.....
page 159 reminds me that sarbanes-oxley required precise tracking of financial documents and that when i lived in nyc i was, for the most part, a sarbanes-oxley temp. pretty much every job i had was for a company that had been in the news for being bad.
......
---oh my gosh, not a review, just stuff i want to think about. is very messy...is not meant to be clever, like here is a book about mess and here is my messy mess. i hope no one could even consider that i would do such a george herbert-ass thing! here is a poem about an altar; i have made the words look like an altar! or whatever.----
i started reading this book when it came out, but it is so very, very *2oo6* that i couldn't take it. it's 2021 now, so back at it.
i need some help figuring out this 2006-iness quality. is this a publishing trend? the dubner&levitt gotcha! school of writing: "we know you think you know that [whatever] is true, but allow us to present very specific small sets of numbers that will reveal your idiot ways." the gladwell-inspired self help from sociologists for professional professionals. like, they arent jared diamond but aspire to the diamondesque and in the more peripheral texts (this one!) are sure to quote him.
was all this the efflourescence of the Fast Company era? a repudiation of it? both?
i really don't and really didn't dislike Freakonomics as much as it may seem. d&l relied overmuch on a narrative formula, but that was ok...it is just that the book was so popular that it seemed like everyone started relying on that same formula (the jonah whoever boston globe guy who was always writing those "you no doubt think people in cities are smart but ACTUALLY cities make you dumb because you never have to look down and wade through a creek to get somewhere"
2006 was about the time i decided to focus on just a few authors instead of the whole hot wide world of new nonfiction. just for a little while, i thought, i will only pay attention to new releases from thomas frank, paul krugman, sarah vowell, chuck klosterman, jon krakauer. david brooks was on the list, but his interests diverged from mine (no hard feelings, go with god etc). at any rate, it was a good decision because i'm not not enjoying this book.… (altro)