Title Teaser
★ On August 1st, we’ll give away a FREE PDF of Issue 3 (featuring Tom Hodgkinson) to everyone on the mailing list. Don’t miss out. Join now.
Apparent Subservience
I’m struggling a bit with Paul Manson’s Postcapitalism but at least it has this:
Not a bad description of a young wage slave, that. Violent resentment is right!
★ On August 1st, we’ll give away a FREE PDF of Issue 3 (featuring Tom Hodgkinson) to everyone on the mailing list. Don’t miss out. Join now.
Issue Three — Free!
Issue Three is the most popular issue of New Escapologist we’ve ever done.
Seven years on, it still sells well. Who knows why?
Maybe it’s for the emphasis on practicalities. Maybe it’s for the very funny piece about skiving at work. Maybe it’s for the lovely interview with Tom Hodgkinson.
Whatever the reason for the issue’s popularity, we’re going to honor its godfather status by giving it away for free on PDF to everyone on the New Escapologist mailing list.
Many will know we ran a similar give-away for Issue Twelve last month. The response was encouraging, so we’re doing this one more (and only one more!) time.
Join the list today and we’ll send out the PDF on August 1st.
★ Buy the brand-new Issue 12 of New Escapologist at the shop; buy our popular digital bundle; or get the Escape Everything! book.
Ich Bin Raus
Can you believe it? There’s going to be a German edition of Escape Everything! called Ich Bin Raus, which means “I’m Out”.
I’m very happy that the life of the book is now longer than I originally imagined.
Here’s a page about the new edition, though it’s probably only useful if you happen to speak German.
It’s entertaining (for me) to see these all-too-familiar pages in translation. Since I only speak English and a little French, these pages should be unreadable but I can still mysteriously read them thanks to intense familiarity with the original.
Look, here’s “Foreword by David Cain” in German! “Vorwort von David Cain”. Cool.
★ Buy the brand-new Issue 12 of New Escapologist at the shop; buy our popular digital bundle; join the mailing list for occasional newsletters and free gifts; or get the Escape Everything! book.
Work, Love, and Couples
The Guardian has a feature in which anonymous people submit letters they don’t have the courage to send. It’s a bit like when an office worker spends Monday afternoon pecking out a scornful email to the boss without actually clicking send, except now there’s an outlet for it.
This example is from a man who exhausts himself as a lawyer while his wife looks after the children at home. He’s bitter about this because he’s shouldering the family’s financial burden alone and can’t see a sign of it stopping:
I don’t think I can do this for another 25 years. I often dream of leaving my firm for a less demanding position, with you making up any financial deficit with a job – even a modest one – of your own. I’ve asked, and sometimes pleaded, for years with you to get a job, any job. Many of my free hours are spent helping with the house and the kids, and I recognise that traditional gender roles are often oppressive, but that cuts both ways.
It’s easy to dismiss this as the sour grapes of privilege (boohoo, the poor man with his social mobility) but when you think of work as a curse, as I do, instead of a gummy medallion, one can sympethise. It’s also a reminder that the benefits of gender equity aren’t exclusively for women but for the whole of society.
If this couple left the traditional breadwinner/homemaker gender roles in the dustbin of history and shared the duties of moneymaking and domestic work, I think the whole family would be a lot happier.
This is about society’s shitty attitude towards women and its exoneration of work. Through these idiot values, we’ve come to look down our noses on housework and parenting as if they weren’t vitally important, and arrived at a labour market where it’s difficult to find rewarding part-time work. The result is a shadow society of unrewarded home-makers and an aboveground society of burned-out husks.
Things are changing but far too slowly.
Funnily enough, my next Idler column (Idler No. 50) is about how cohabiting couples can help each other escape the rat race as a domestic tag team while staying in love.
★ Buy the brand-new Issue 12 of New Escapologist at the shop; buy our popular digital bundle; join the mailing list for occasional newsletters and free gifts; or get the Escape Everything! book.
But I Left Anyway
From The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by the brilliant Haruki Murakami.
★ Buy the brand-new Issue 12 of New Escapologist at the shop; buy our popular digital bundle; join the mailing list for occasional newsletters and free gifts; or get the Escape Everything! book.