Having no personal life is the new uber-cool, says Harvard study
Humblebragging
or boasting about how hectic your life is may be the new status symbol,
according to Harvard researchers.
Researchers
found that being seen as constantly busy and overworked is the new way to prove
that one is ‘in demand’. Taking the afternoon off for a round of golf or
enjoying a beach holiday in a five-star resort were once signs of having social
capital.
However,
phrases such as “I have no life” and “I desperately need a holiday” are now
used to imply social standing, researchers said. Ordering or buying food online
is the perfect way to prove to neighbours that you are simply too busy and
important to go to the supermarket.
“Movies,
magazines and popular TV shows often highlight the abundance of money and
leisure time among the wealthy,” said Neeru Paharia, an assistant professor at
Harvard University in the US.
“In
recent years, featuring wealthy people relaxing by the pool or on a yacht,
playing tennis and polo, or skiing and hunting are being replaced with ads
featuring busy individuals who work long hours and have very limited leisure
time,” Paharia said. “Displaying one’s busyness at work and lack of leisure
time operates as a visible signal of status in the eyes of others,” she said.
The
study, carried out in the US, found that brands that marketed themselves as
time-saving were becoming increasingly high-status, because of the people who
used them. However, in Italy the effect was completely reversed. Italians still
view a leisurely life as representative of high status, researchers said.
The
study was published in the Journal of Consumer Research.
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