Work
space can be important, and in large organizations tends to follow whatever
management theory is in vogue at the moment. In the 1940s and 1950s, big open
spaces were all the rage, especially in functions like finance and accounting. The
1960s and 1970s brought a lot of enclosed offices; my first job at a large
corporation in Houston found me in an 8x12 office that had a large storage
closet. Things changed in the 1980s and 1990s, and cubicle farms could be found
all over. In my workplace today, we have a mix of cubicle farms and regular
offices.
I
have wondered if there is a certain poetry to work space, a certain rhythm and
cadence and language and flow and, well, poetry
that creates these places where work gets done. A kind of rhetoric for work
space – the cubicle as haiku, for example. (For the record, I’m not down on
cubicles; what I consider the best speech I’ve ever written was written in a
cubicle.)
To
continue reading, please see my article at Tweetspeak
Poetry today.
I was just googling for Work Space Search in the hopes of finding diy ideas for organizing a nice home office when I stumbled upon your blog. Great post. I remember very well the "cubical period" and it was awful!
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