WASHINGTON: Americans are obsessed with Steve Jobs because the Apple
co-founder's story fits perfectly with the romantic individualist story
that American culture can't seem to get enough, according to a US
researcher.
Thomas Streeter, professor of sociology at the
University of Vermont, investigated America's obsession with stories
about celebrity CEOs like Jobs, suggesting it says more about American
culture than the man.
Jobs' story fits perfectly with the
romantic individualist story that American culture can't seem to get
enough, despite being yet another romanticised story about a well-known
business celebrity, Strreter said.
"Jobs is an interesting
character, but if we were choosing whose story to tell based on the
importance of their inventions or business innovations, we'd be telling
stories about other people like computer scientist Dennis Ritchie, who
was central to the development of the software and concepts that made
the internet possible," said Streeter.
There has to be another
reason that the Steve Jobs story has been told over and over again since
the 1980s instead of about men like Ritchie, Streeter wrote in a paper
published in the International Journal of Communication.
"I
think the reason is in our culture: we love the story of Jobs because we
love the story of the guy who bucked convention, pursued his passions,
and got rich doing so," he said.
Stories like Jobs' are
perpetuated by a capitalistic machinery that infuses romantic ways of
thinking into all areas of society, according to Streeter.
"Culture is not just on our screens, but also in the circuitry and institutions that make those screens work," he said.
"Markets, property, and corporations are now infused with variants of
romantic ways of thinking, alongside more traditional ways of thinking.
Capitalism has gotten Byronic. The current Steve Jobs craze, which took
off in a big way after he stepped down from Apple in 2011, seems to
prove my point about Byronic capitalism.
"Jobs' story nicely
fits the romantic individualist story that American culture is in love
with. We love the story, and the case of Steve Jobs gives us a chance to
tell that story over and over," he said.
The institutional
machinery devoted to producing celebrity CEO's is in response to
populist criticisms of modern corporations in hopes of making people
feel good about a more moral Capitalistic system, said Streeter.
0 comments:
Post a Comment