Adrift: America in 100 charts / created by Scott Galloway.
Material type: TextTransworld Publishers, 2022Description: 299 pages: illustrations; 25 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780857504746
- HC103 GAL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Main Library Open Shelf | HC103 GAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 160226 | Available | BK148067 | ||
Book | Main Library Open Shelf | HC103 GAL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 160227 | Available | BK147982 |
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HC102 WYL Beyond Tallulah | HC102.5.A2 CON Contemporary entrepreneurs | HC103 GAL Adrift: America in 100 charts / | HC103 GAL Adrift: America in 100 charts / | HC103 NEW New economic history : selected readings / | HC106.5 SMI Corporations in crisis. | HC106.83 MAT Handbook of investment research : |
Includes bibliography
We are only just beginning to reckon with our post-pandemic future. As political extremism intensifies, the great resignation affects businesses everywhere, and supply chain issues crush bottom lines, we're faced with daunting questions - is our democracy under threat? How will Big Tech change our lives? What does job security look like for me? America is on the brink of massive change - change that will disrupt the workings of our economy and drastically impact the financial backbone of our nation: the middle class. In Adrift, Galloway looks to the past - from 1945 to present day - to explain just how America arrived at this precipice. Telling the story of our nation through 100 charts, Galloway demonstrates how crises such as Jim Crow, World War II, and the Stock Market Crash of 2008, as well as the escalating power of technology, an entrenched white patriarchy, and the socio-economic effects of the pandemic, created today's perfect storm. Adrift attempts to make sense of it all, and offers Galloway's unique take on where we're headed and who we'll become, touching on topics as wide-ranging as online dating to minimum wage to the American dream. Just as in 1945 and 1980, America is once again a nation at a crossroads. This time, what will it take for our nation to keep up with the fast and violent changes to our new world?
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