Am I Working for a Company or Dictatorship?
The standard way of thinking about the world’s most powerful companies has been generally assumed as companies following a system; a system organized with honest and fair procedures, healthcare benefits, and being inclusive for all employees. Dave Eggers’ novel, The Circle, is a futuristic society and most of the events in the novel occur in a manufactured community, but the employees refer to this place as the Circle or the world’s most powerful company. In the workplace and society of The Circle, science and technology is used as a means of control over the employees. Those in control and with the power are called the three Wise-Men. Some may perceive the company’s system as mocking a dictatorship or cult; the Circle’s complete control over human activity destroys the company, as it becomes a scheme consisting of three men with all of the power and their brainwashed and electronically controlled employees. Eggers reminds us that today’s society risks the possibility of a future dystopian society while technology and scientific knowledge continues to improve.
Eggers celebrates the fact that The Circle draws fascination and devotion from those working for the company. For example, Mae Holland, an employee in The Circle, beams with gratitude upon being hired. Eggers writes
“…here [Mae] was, gainfully employed by the Circle, with her own health insurance, her own apartment in the city, being no burden to her parents,” (4).
Eggers’ point is that the company lures in its employees with benefits, relief from stress, and essentially anything and everything that would have people from around the world lining up outside, begging to work for the Circle. Here many proponents of successful businesses would probably argue that the Circle is made up of employees who are the best of their generation. While this stance may be considered logical, those who support these businesses should be well informed about the system within the Circle. The most powerful one of the three Wise-Men, Eamon Bailey, reveals his level of control through his successful manipulative statements:
“A circle is the strongest shape in the universe. Nothing can beat it, nothing can improve upon it. And that’s what we want to be: perfect” (287).
In other words, the one who holds the most controlling power also holds a vision for a “perfect” monopoly and transparency through all employees.
Dave Eggers further contributes to what the viewers (outside of the Circle) know versus what life is like behind the scenes. Towards the climax in the novel, a heated conversation is held between an employee and Bailey, where Bailey is confronted about the ways he treats employees at the Circle:
“You’re depriving them of something they have a right to. Knowledge is a basic human right. Equal access to all possible human experiences is a basic human right” (303).
The essence of this argument is those with power have too much control and the company’s bosses were misusing technological advancements to gain more control as they affect human individuals.
People, such as those working for a popular and successful company, used to believe that founders of such powerful companies were created based upon a long-term envision and in order to succeed, any short-term actions within the company would always be considered appropriate.
What happens behind the scenes of successful companies is important because it is happening today and will continue to worsen unless philosophers, such as Dave Eggers, bring the issue to surface immediately and effectively. Along with Eggers, another philosopher Slavoj Zizek nails the seriousness of this issue. In his academic journal Capitalism, Zizek explains the root of businesses operating in such a way that mocks ideology groups and types of government:
“The goal is invariably to democratize capitalism in the name of fighting excesses and to extend democratic control of the economy through the pressure of more media scrutiny, parliamentary inquiries, harsher laws.”
Basically, Zizek is saying the fundamental nature of the global economy is becoming extinct as a result of businesses working in an unprofessional manner, which is exactly what seems to be the underlying cause for all of the mishaps that occur in The Circle.
A number of researchers have recently suggested that Eggers’ work has several fundamental reflections of a futuristic society. A recently published news article Choose Your Dystopia, it is evident that Eggers feels strongly towards his opinion and the underlying purpose for writing The Circle is brought to surface. Alexander Nazaryan noteably credits Eggers
“…fears the encroachment of ones and zeros upon the frontal cortex, where they multiply like a blinding tumor. It is the tragic conflation of information with knowledge that troubles him most, the illusion that insight is never more than a click away” and “the greatest threat to our freedom is our ‘feeling that we're entitled to know anything we want about anyone we want.’”
With this in mind, readers would feel chills and nervousness while reading The Circle. Dave Eggers successfully conveys a developing issue in society, one in which may lead to his novel defining our society’s reality in the near future.