Description
Book SynopsisSorting Letters, Sorting Lives offers an examination of a workplace that for many years has employed an extraordinarily diverse workforce: the United States Postal Service. In the post-civil rights era, the Postal Service took a leading role in managing a diverse workforce, seeking to acknowledge and honor the different groups and cultures represented among its workforce. The USPS has constantly been looking for ways to motivate its employees, to create a sense of fairness and belonging, and to minimize interpersonal and inter-group conflicts. Linda Benbow examines the organizational culture and levels of diversity found in an urban United States Postal Service mail processing facility. She shows how employee perceptions of social differences and their interactions with coworkers contribute to their identity and work life within the organization. Painting detailed portraits of race, social class, and gender in a mail processing facility, Benbow looks at ways employees of diverse back
Trade ReviewWritten in a clear and jargon-free style, this work explores an agency that is important to everyone, but has probably not been thought about beyond one's occasional journey to a post office to retrieve or send material. The interview data add important depth and richness to the work, and it should draw the attention of scholars of race, work and occupations, and gender. The ultimate power of this book rests in not simply pointing out that racism and sexism are alive in the postal service, but in stating what it means for these conditions to exist particularly in that service. -- Alford A. Young Jr., University of Michigan