
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
"Quiet quitting" is the latest workplace trend sparking conversation in social and mainstream media. The idea went viral after TikTok user Zaid Khan, a 24-year-old engineer in New York City, talked about not actually outright quitting a job, but "quitting" the idea that you have to go above and beyond the job description. It also spawned a spinoff, "quiet firing," which refers to employers who don't offer raises or promotions, or use other tactics to passive-aggressively push employees out of a job.
We speak with Sarah Damaske, Professor of Sociology and Labor & Employment Relations at Penn State University, about "quiet quitting," "quiet firing," and what these viral ideas say about the current state of labor and work.
4.3
712712 ratings
"Quiet quitting" is the latest workplace trend sparking conversation in social and mainstream media. The idea went viral after TikTok user Zaid Khan, a 24-year-old engineer in New York City, talked about not actually outright quitting a job, but "quitting" the idea that you have to go above and beyond the job description. It also spawned a spinoff, "quiet firing," which refers to employers who don't offer raises or promotions, or use other tactics to passive-aggressively push employees out of a job.
We speak with Sarah Damaske, Professor of Sociology and Labor & Employment Relations at Penn State University, about "quiet quitting," "quiet firing," and what these viral ideas say about the current state of labor and work.
6,202 Listeners
461 Listeners
9,165 Listeners
665 Listeners
3,760 Listeners
920 Listeners
38,527 Listeners
43,846 Listeners
319 Listeners
90,686 Listeners
37,890 Listeners
27,060 Listeners
917 Listeners
11,518 Listeners
32,106 Listeners
929 Listeners
8,252 Listeners
43,327 Listeners
6,672 Listeners
11,914 Listeners
4,625 Listeners
320 Listeners
1,883 Listeners
16,074 Listeners
1,512 Listeners