A Genealogy of Refusal : Walking away from crisis and scarcity narratives

Bartleby at the Wall


What can we learn from Melville's Bartleby about workplace refusal? As Andrew Delbanco comments, the story "Bartleby, the Scrivener" [is] “An old pice of writing by a guy who lived almost two hundred years ago and was describing a world that in some ways is very far from our own but it connects intimately and immediately to our own experience" (Giamatti & Delbanco 2020).

Melville's Bartleby character is the fictional cornerstone of workplace refusal. He begins work in an attorney's office as a scrivener, occupying a small work area near a window that looks out onto a brick wall a few feet away. Bartleby's employer is at first impressed by his respectful demeanor and industry-- Bartleby appears to work tirelessly and accomplish as much as, if not more than, his coworkers.  Later, however, the boss becomes baffled as Bartleby begins to refuse certain tasks, until eventually he's not working at all. The boss writes, "Bartleby did nothing but stand at his window in his dead-wall revery" (Melville, 1853).

Let's take a look at this clip from Friedman's 1973 film adaptation of Bartleby.

In the story, Bartleby's employer comments that "Nothing so aggravates an earnest man as a passive resistance . . . "
 

"As Camus suggests in The Rebel, a “man who says no… is also a man who says yes, from the moment he makes his first gesture of rebellion.” And so for each of Bartleby’s rejections, might there be an unspoken acceptance of — or, at the least, a preference for — something else? Or is this guy so hardcore punk-rock that he’d even go so far as to eventually reject preferences altogether?" (Simón 2019).


As the story progresses, Bartleby's continued refusals eventually cause waves throughout the office, as his coworkers gossip about his lack of work ethic, complain that they have to pick up the work of the slacker, and even encourage the employer to fire Bartleby. Delbanco observes that "what Bartleby does is make it harder and harder for him not to look at him."(Giamatti & Delbanco, 2020) Pretty soon everyone's looking and they can't look away.

This scene in Friedman's film captures that moment perfectly (Friedman, 1973):

Paul Giamatti in conversation with Andrew Delbanco observes that "All of us do a good job at not looking at other people, particularly if they look like a problem that we don’t want to have to deal with, then we’d rather they were somebody else’s problem." (Giamatti & Delbanco, 2020)



Let's look together at Melville and Bartleby's fictional descendants, examine the way they promulgate or refuse crisis and scarcity narratives, as we try to answer the question:

How can fiction or popular culture inform the way we promulgate or refuse crisis & scarcity narratives in librarianship?

In them we can trace a fictional genealogy of refusal, through which can we together consider the way workplace refusal plays out in fiction and popular culture between Bartleby and today's stories.

Can what we observe help us contextualize the way crisis and scarcity narratives influence expectations about  the archivist's budget, the librarian's role, the curator's duty to the collection?

From Bartleby can we learn how to say:


 

This page has paths:

This page references: