مكتبة جرير

The Work Illusion

كتاب مطبوع
وحدة البيع: EACH
المؤلف: Johansen, Elliot
تاريخ النشر: ‎2026‎‎
تصنيف الكتاب: الادارة والأعمال,
عدد الصفحات: 100 Pages
الصيغة: غلاف ورقي
هذا الكتاب يُطبع عند الطلب وغير قابل للاسترجاع بعد الشراء
    أو

    عن المنتج

    You followed the path.

    Go to school. Get a job. Work hard. Build a life.

    It was supposed to work.

    But something feels off.

    Burnout is everywhere. Wages havent kept up. Work dominates your time, your identity, and your sense of stability. And even when you do everything right, the outcome rarely matches the promise.

    The Work Illusion breaks down why.

    This book exposes the structure behind modern work culture and reveals how it was built, not as a natural system, but as a constructed one shaped by history, incentives, and psychological conditioning.

    Inside, youll explore:

    • How the education system prepares you for compliance, not autonomy
    • Why longer hours dont lead to greater productivity
    • How corporate structures reward visibility over value
    • The psychological forces that keep people participating in systems they question
    • Why burnout is not personal failure, but a structural outcome
    • The growing gap between effort and reward in modern economies

    But this is not just a critique.

    Its a shift in perspective.

    Backed by real-world data, including large-scale 4-day workweek trials, economic research, and behavioral psychology studies, this book shows that the current system is not fixed, and that alternatives are already working.

    More importantly, it brings the focus back to you.

    Not with rigid answers or prescriptions, but with clarity.

    Because once you see the system clearly, the question changes.

    Not "How do I succeed within it?"

    But:

    "What kind of life do I actually want to live?"

    The Work Illusion is for anyone who has ever felt that something about modern work doesnt make sense, and is ready to understand why.

    عرض أكثر

    مراجعات العملاء