EP 432: Queer Failure with Kate Tyson

"Failure" got a glow-up sometime in the last 20 years. Instead of something to be feared, gurus tell us to embrace failure. That failure is a waypoint on the path to success. But this shift in our relationship with failure has only further inscribed the winner-loser binary that causes so much of our anxiety about the future.What if "failure" wasn't part of the "success" formula? What if we looked beyond conventional notions of failure and success to question whether those ideas even matter at all? Whether they serve us at all?Today on the podcast, Kate Tyson (Strathmann) is queering failure. She's questioning what it means to build a business or a project without the normative notions of success and failure. And how calling those norms into question allows us to imagine new and different ways to do business—or any kind of venture."Queer Failure" is an excerpt from [Im]Possible Business by Kate Tyson.Footnotes:[Im]Possible Business by Kate TysonFollow Kate's writing on SubstackThe Queer Art of Failure by Jack HalberstamFox Market and Bar in Montpelier, Vermont"Don't Bail Out the Restaurant Industry" by Tunde WeySaidiya HartmanÉtaín UnderthingsRunway's Entrepreneur Universal Basic Income programWanderwell Bookkeeping and Consulting"Queer Theory" by Nancy Harding in Key Concepts in Critical Management Studies ★ Support this podcast ★

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"Work" is broken. We're overcommitted, underutilized, and out of whack. But it doesn't have to be this way. What Works is a podcast about rethinking work, business, and leadership as we navigate the 21st-century economy. When you're an entrepreneur, independent worker, or employee who doesn't want to lose yourself to the whims of late-stage capitalism, this show is for you. Host Tara McMullin covers money, management, culture, media, philosophy, and more to figure out what's working (and what's not) today. Tara offers a distinctly interdisciplinary approach to deep-dive analysis of how we work and how work shapes us.