English, asked by othdabre, 19 days ago

Rich people of the 19th century - as shown in cinema – spent their evenings in lounges and salons, dancing leisurely, blowing smoke rings, discussing arcane philosophical topics, or romancing well-dressed demure ladies. To be rich was to have leisure time Others did their running around. Today, the rich man is the one with no time at all. Always hard-pressed and pre-occupied. Not only do they have their hands full, they make quite a show of it. Why? How did 'busyness' become the ultimate status-symbol of our times? Unlike our agricultural and industrial ancestors who prided themselves on the luxury goods they owned and how little they worked, today the ultimate aspirational objects are the workers themselves, who, by bragging about how busy they are, can signal just how much the labour market values them and their skills. How much value people place on 'busyness' also varies with culture. Americans, who do not even have the right to take paid holidays, place a premium on workaholism, while countries like Spain, Italy, Greece and France, which are more laidback despite being developed, value leisure more.

write summary on the topic and give a suitable title to it.

pls help ​

Answers

Answered by punamsonawane7111
3

Answer:

Rich people of the 19th century - as shown in cinema – spent their evenings in lounges and salons, dancing leisurely, blowing smoke rings, discussing arcane philosophical topics, or romancing well-dressed demure ladies. Unlike our agricultural and industrial ancestors who prided themselves on the luxury goods they owned and how little they workedAmericans, who do not even have the right to take paid holidays, place a premium on workaholism, while countries like Spain, Italy, Greece and France, which are more laidback despite being developed, value leisure more.

Title Rich peoples :America

Answered by swatisakpal99
0

ujdududhdjdusisisisiiaiia

Similar questions