Creating the Image of the Workaholic in Fiction: From the Romantic Hero to the Victim of the System The image of a person obsessed with work in fiction has traveled a long and winding path. From the almost biblical curse of "eating bread by the sweat of your face" to the romantic aura of the creator, from the tragic figure burning out at work to the ironic portrait of an office worker whose life is dictated by deadlines and corporate ethics. Literature has always been a mirror in which society has examined its fears and ideals. And the attitude towards the workaholic is essentially the attitude towards the very idea of work, its meaning, its value, and its limits. How has this image changed and what does it say to us today? From Biblical Curse to Protestant Ethics For many centuries, work was seen as a punishment. The biblical story of the expulsion from Paradise established the idea that to work means to atone for sin. In medieval literature, the diligent hero is often a monk or a craftsman whose work is a service to God, not an end in itself. True calling is prayer and contemplation, not vain activity. However, with the coming of the New Age, especially after the Reformation, the attitude towards work undergoes a cardinal change. Max Weber's celebrated Protestant ethics declares work not a curse but a calling, a form of service to God. And literature gradually begins to embrace a new hero — a person for whom work becomes the meaning of life. In eighteenth-century novels, we see merchants and entrepreneurs whose obsession with business is no longer condemned but rather admired. Defoe, Swift, and then Balzac create images of people who build their prosperity solely through relentless work. Their workaholism is the path to success, recognition, and self-realization. However, even in these early images, there is a duality: often, behind the outward success lies loneliness, the loss of human connections, and moral deafness. The Romantic Hero: Creativity as Obsess ...
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