Essays on Work and Culture

audiobook

Essays on Work and Culture

by Hamilton Wright Mabie

EN·~3 hours·26 chapters

Chapters

26 total
1

ESSAYS ON WORK AND CULTURE - BY - HAMILTON WRIGHT MABIE

0:57
2

Chapter I

7:37
3

Chapter II

7:41
4

Chapter III

6:12
5

Chapter IV

7:00
6

Chapter V

7:01
7

Chapter VI

7:08
8

Chapter VII

5:40
9

Chapter VIII

6:46
10

Chapter IX

6:44

Description

This collection of thought‑provoking essays asks a simple but urgent question: are we merely tools of our trades, or can we let the whole person emerge through work? It opens by exposing a modern habit that treats versatility as weakness, insisting that a single‑track career is the only respectable path. The tone is conversational yet rigorous, inviting listeners to notice how this mindset shapes everyday decisions.

The author surveys cultural expectations, drawing on figures like Pericles and Michelangelo to illustrate what is lost when society discourages the blending of art, science, religion, and commerce. Each piece examines the tension between external judgment and inner drive, suggesting that genuine fulfillment often requires crossing the borders that our institutions have erected. Listeners are prompted to reconsider how specialization can become a kind of tyranny, stifling both creativity and moral growth.

Throughout, the essays weave philosophy, personal reflection, and practical insight, offering a fresh perspective on how work might become a richer form of self‑expression. The narrative encourages a more integrated view of life, where imagination and discipline reinforce rather than oppose each other.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (176K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Hamilton Wright Mabie

Hamilton Wright Mabie

1846–1916

A warm, thoughtful voice in American letters, he helped generations of readers connect literature with everyday life, nature, and culture. Best known as an essayist and longtime editor of The Outlook, he wrote with a calm, reflective style that still feels inviting.

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