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La solitude n'est pas a la mode. Ni les introvertis. Le monde des affaires et de la culture appartient a ceux qui parlent haut. L'homme ideal est sociable, a le gout du risque, sait travailler en equipe. Le discret, le timide est presque suspect, son caractere n'est pas adapte a notre monde. L'essentiel est de n'etre jamais seul. Susan Cain a mene une enquete passionnante sur l'histoire et les raisons de cette domination. Comment l'extraverti a-t-il progressivement pris le pouvoir ? Comment est-on passe d'une culture de caractere a une culture de personnalite Elle demontre avec des exemples, Chopin, Darwin, Gandhi, Gates, Wozniac..., et en puisant dans les dernieres recherches des psychologues, des anthropologues, des sociologues..., comment la creativite des introvertis rayonne sur les entreprises, les arts et meme la politique. Non, le brainstorming ne donne pas de meilleurs resultats que le travail solitaire. Non, les banques dirigees par des chefs charismatiques ne generent pas des resultats superieurs a celles animees par les patrons plus discrets. Non, les grandes avancees politiques n'ont pas ete realisees par les plus forts en gueule... Susan Cain prouve meme le contraire. Elle s'appuie aussi sur des examens du fonctionnement du cerveau qui tendent a prouver que les introvertis recherchent le calme, car ils enregistrent les stimulations du monde exterieur avec une intensite accrue. Elle rassemble aussi des conseils pour les parents et les professeurs qui ont a faire a des enfants introvertis afin de les aider a profiter de leur sensibilite et a ne pas les faire tomber dans une certaine tendance a la victimisation. 30 a 50 % de la population occidentale serait composee d'introvertis. Le livre de Susan Cain nous apprend a mieux les comprendre.Traduit de l'anglais par Marie de Premonville… (plus d'informations)
Reading this has been an epiphany for me; I fit almost 100% into the description of an introvert. I wish someone had explained this to me years ago. Things that I thought were a problem are simply natural for the type of person I am. And there is nothing wrong with being an introvert. Many of our greatest minds are and have been introverts. Now, if anyone tells me I should make more of an effort to socialize in big groups (where I do not feel comfortable), or learn how to chit chat about meaningless things, or stop being so serious or so sensitive, I can ignore them (or if I'm in a good mood, explain why that isn't necessary or true). Cain also explains about extroverts and how our society (most of western society) is prejudiced in favor of extroverts, how classrooms and open-plan offices are set up for them, and much more. As the blurb on the back says, "For far too long, those who are naturally quiet, serious or sensitive have been overlooked. The loudest have taken over -- even if they have nothing to say." ( )
Highly recommended for anyone who thinks they are weird because they don’t like being around people. This book explains the diversity of human nature and how so much of the external world is built just for the loud people. It will make you realize you’re not that weird after all. ( )
Informations provenant du Partage des connaissances anglais.Modifiez pour passer à votre langue.
A species in which everyone was General Patton would not succeed, any more than would a race in which everyone was Vincent van Gogh. I prefer to think that the planet needs athletes, philosophers, sex symbols, painters, scientists; it needs the warmhearted, the hardhearted, the coldhearted, and the weakhearted. It needs those who can devote their lives to studying how many droplets of water are secreted by the salivary glands of dogs under which circumstances, and it needs those who can capture the passing impression of cherry blossoms in a fourteen-syllable poem or devote twenty-five pages to the dissection of a small boy's feelings as he lies in bed in the dark waiting for his mother to kiss him good night. . . . Indeed the presence of outstanding strengths presupposes that energy needed in other areas has been channeled away from them.
- Allen Shawn
Dédicace
Informations provenant du Partage des connaissances anglais.Modifiez pour passer à votre langue.
To my childhood family
Premiers mots
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[Introduction] Montgomery, Alabama. December 1, 1955.
[Author's Note] I have been working on this book officially since 2005, and unofficially for my entire adult life.
The date: 1902. The place: Harmony Church, Missouri, a tiny, dot-on-the-map town located on a floodplain a hundred miles from Kansas City.
[Conclusion] Whether you're an introvert yourself or an extrovert who loves or works with one, I hope you'll benefit personally from the insights in this book.
[A Note on the Dedication] My grandfather was a soft-spoken man with sympathetic blue eyes, and a passion for books and ideas.
[A Note on the Words Introvert and Extrovert] This book is about introversion as seen from a cultural point of view.
Citations
Informations provenant du Partage des connaissances anglais.Modifiez pour passer à votre langue.
To ask whether it's nature or nurture ... is like asking whether a blizzard is caused by temperature or humidity.
"It's so easy to confuse schmoozing ability with talent. Someone seems like a good presenter, easy to get along with and those traits are rewarded. Well, why is that? They're valuable traits but we put too much of a premium on presenting and not enough on substance and critical thinking." (one venture capitalist)
We need leaders who build not their own egos but the institutions they run.
So if, deep down, you've been thinking that it's only natural for the bold and sociable to dominate the reserved and sensitive, and that the Extrovert Ideal is innate to humanity, Robert McCrae's personality map suggests a different truth: that each way of being—quiet and talkative, careful and audacious, inhibited and unrestrained—is characteristic of its own mighty civilization.
If there is one insight you take away from this book, though, I hope it's a newfound sense of entitlement to be yourself.
The U.S Army has a name for a similar phenomenon: "the Bus to Abilene." "Any army officer can tell you what that means," Colonel (Ret.) Stephen J. Gerras, a professor of behavioral sciences at the U.S. Army War College, told Yale Alumni Magazine in 2008. "It's about a family sitting on a porch in Texas on a hot summer day, and somebody says, 'I'm bored. Why don't we go to Abilene?' When they get to Abilene, somebody says, 'You know, I didn't really want to go.' And the next person says, 'I didn't want to go—I thought you wanted to go,' and so on. Whenever you're in an army group and somebody says, 'I think we're all getting on the bus to Abilene here,' that is a red flag. You can stop a conversation with it. It is a very powerful artifact of our culture."
We don't need giant personalities to transform companies. We need leaders who build not their own egos but the institutions they run.
Grant had a theory about which kinds of circumstances would call for introverted leadership. His hypothesis was that extroverted leaders enhance group performance when employees are passive, but that introverted leaders are more effective with proactive employees.
Grant says it makes sense that introverts are uniquely good at leading initiative-takers. Because of their inclination to listen to others and lack of interest in dominating social situations, introverts are more likely to hear and implement suggestions. Having benefited from the talents of their followers, they are then likely to motivate them to be even more proactive. Introverted leaders create a virtuous circle of proactivity, in other words.
Extroverts, on the other hand, can be so intent on putting their own stamp on events that they risk losing others' good ideas along the way and allowing workers to lapse into passivity.
But with the natural ability to inspire, extroverted leaders are better at getting results from more passive workers.
Open-plan offices have been found to reduce productivity and impair memory. They're associated with high staff turnover. They make people sick, hostile, unmotivated, and insecure. Open-plan workers are more likely to suffer from high blood pressure and elevated stress levels and to get the flu; they argue more with their colleagues; they worry about coworkers eavesdropping on their phone calls and spying on their computer screens. They have fewer personal and confidential conversations with colleagues. They're often subject to loud and uncontrollable noise, which raises heart rates; releases cortisol, the body's fight-or-flight "stress" hormone; and makes people socially distant, quick to anger, aggression, and slow to help others.
Indeed, excessive stimulation seems to impede learning: a recent study found that people learn better after a quiet stroll through the woods than after a noisy walk down a city street. Another study, of 38,000 knowledge workers across different sectors, found that the simple act of being interrupted is one of the biggest barriers to productivity. Even multitasking, that prized feat of modern-day office warriors, turns out to be a myth.
Schwartz's research suggests something important: we can stretch our personalities, but only up to a point. Our inborn temperaments influence us, regardless of the lives we lead. A sizable part of who we are is ordained by our genes, by our brains, by our nervous systems. And yet the elasticity that Schwartz found in some of the high-reactive teens also suggests the converse: we have free will and can use it to shape our personalities.
We might call this the "rubber band theory" of personality. We are like rubber bands at rest. We are elastic and can stretch ourselves, but only so much.
But what [my grandfather] loved to to best was to read. In his small apartment, where as a widower he'd lived alone for decades, all the urniture had yielded its original function to serve as a surface for piles of books: gold-leafed Hebrew texts jumbled together with Margaret Atwood and Milan Kumdera.
Derniers mots
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Lewis Carroll was an introvert, too, by the way. Without him, there would be no Alice in Wonderland. And by now, this shouldn't surprise us.
La solitude n'est pas a la mode. Ni les introvertis. Le monde des affaires et de la culture appartient a ceux qui parlent haut. L'homme ideal est sociable, a le gout du risque, sait travailler en equipe. Le discret, le timide est presque suspect, son caractere n'est pas adapte a notre monde. L'essentiel est de n'etre jamais seul. Susan Cain a mene une enquete passionnante sur l'histoire et les raisons de cette domination. Comment l'extraverti a-t-il progressivement pris le pouvoir ? Comment est-on passe d'une culture de caractere a une culture de personnalite Elle demontre avec des exemples, Chopin, Darwin, Gandhi, Gates, Wozniac..., et en puisant dans les dernieres recherches des psychologues, des anthropologues, des sociologues..., comment la creativite des introvertis rayonne sur les entreprises, les arts et meme la politique. Non, le brainstorming ne donne pas de meilleurs resultats que le travail solitaire. Non, les banques dirigees par des chefs charismatiques ne generent pas des resultats superieurs a celles animees par les patrons plus discrets. Non, les grandes avancees politiques n'ont pas ete realisees par les plus forts en gueule... Susan Cain prouve meme le contraire. Elle s'appuie aussi sur des examens du fonctionnement du cerveau qui tendent a prouver que les introvertis recherchent le calme, car ils enregistrent les stimulations du monde exterieur avec une intensite accrue. Elle rassemble aussi des conseils pour les parents et les professeurs qui ont a faire a des enfants introvertis afin de les aider a profiter de leur sensibilite et a ne pas les faire tomber dans une certaine tendance a la victimisation. 30 a 50 % de la population occidentale serait composee d'introvertis. Le livre de Susan Cain nous apprend a mieux les comprendre.Traduit de l'anglais par Marie de Premonville
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