Guttersnipe
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,942
- Location
- San Francisco, CA
Now, we have to ask, why can the artist afford to do what the artisan cannot? Is there any reason any longer or is it just generations of tradition coming out of an apprenticeship hierarchy?
Simple realities of physical labor and economic is why. Unlike musicians, who age like wine, skilled artisans age like cheese (which is to say they peak and then decline). This is particularly the case in physically demanding crafts. The older guys know this, and therefore see younger guys (at a "journeyman" level) as a threat which is often manifested as hazing. The economics comes into play in that younger artisans are often more attractive to employers because they work for cheaper, can maintain a faster pace for longer and don't get sick as often. For a skilled tradesman that's a foreman/owner economics comes into play again in that apprentices require additional supervision and slow more skilled craftspeople down . . . again hazing is often a result.
For my part, I'm totally on board with you regarding hazing. I endured a lot of it as an apprentice and when I became a foreman (and later owned my own printing company) I never, NEVER, NEVER ever allowed it to go on.