Analysis Of Malcom Gladwell's Outliers: The Story Of Success

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In Malcom Gladwell’s book, Outliers: The Story of Success, Gladwell investigates the paradigm of success by taking the reader on a journey into the lives of several extremely successful people – outliers. Paradigm is a term used to explain a pattern of something, and in Outliers, Gladwell uses the term to describe different changes in peoples’ mind-sets throughout history. In the carefully chosen case studies, Gladwell breaks down the typical understanding of success by not just looking at factors like innate talents, characteristics, and habits but by digging deeper into social classes, cultures, communities, and generational effects of the successfully elite. Outliers is a true story of success that motivates readers to ponder their world …show more content…

Flom was a Harvard Law School grad working as a partner at the respected New York firm, Skadden & Arps (116). In this chapter, Gladwell explains that three main factors played a role in Flom’s success – ethnicity, demographic luck, and family work ethic. Flom grew up in Brooklyn during the Depression, and his parents were hard-working immigrants from Eastern Europe (Gladwell 116). Flom learned his work ethic from observing his parents and respecting their determination to provide for their impoverished family. As a Jewish lawyer in New York City in the 1950s, Flom was presented with the perfect opportunity to become successful because the larger, more traditional law firms would often pass the undesirable cases down to the firms they considered mediocre (Gladwell 124). As a result, Flom was able to gain his ten thousand hours of practice and become successful because of this opportunity. Along with the other examples from this chapter, Outliers shows that someone’s background – their culture, generation, and family history – can provide some of the most worthwhile opportunities to become successful …show more content…

In chapter seven of Outliers, “The Ethnic Theory of Plane Crashes,” Gladwell entertains the theory of the negative effects of culture on success by using an account of the 1997 Korean Air flight 801 to Guam. The flight was piloted by an experienced captain who was familiar with the route. Ultimately, the plane crashed into a mountain killing 228 of the 254 passengers (Gladwell 179). The crash could have been avoided if only the cultural legacy of hierarchical communication patterns between the pilot and cockpit staff were ignored. Gladwell later explains how cultural legacies can have a positive impact on success. In the subject of mathematics, Asians may have a built-in advantage due to the cultural difference in their number system when compared to the number system of the West, which may result in Asian children being able to count at a younger age than other cultures (Gladwell

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