Linkblog

Magazines, advertising and PR agencies, publishing companies, and literary agencies all still operate on an apprenticeship system—the person answering her boss’s phone is, theoretically, learning how to do her boss’s job one day. And because the industries are so hierarchical, there’s almost no chance of breaking in if you haven’t followed the prescribed path. ‘Many of the smart people I know who have disappeared into assistantships are people who should be, you know, writing. But they’re willing to subsume actual creative endeavor to the drudgery of ‘paying your dues’ in a way they never would for, say, Citigroup.’”

(This content has been aggregated from a source and author external to this site. Read up on the practice of linkblogging and my use of it here. Authors and publishers are welcome to contact me.)

June 25, 2008

Magazines, advertising and PR agencies, publishing companies, and literary agencies all still operate on an apprenticeship system—the person answering her boss’s phone is, theoretically, learning how to do her boss’s job one day. And because the industries are so hierarchical, there’s almost no chance of breaking in if you haven’t followed the prescribed path.

‘Many of the smart people I know who have disappeared into assistantships are people who should be, you know, writing. But they’re willing to subsume actual creative endeavor to the drudgery of ‘paying your dues’ in a way they never would for, say, Citigroup.’”

Doree Shafrir on Ivy League Slaves in The Observer

Leave a Comment

Additional comments powered by BackType