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Dilbert is a satirical comic strip about a micro-managed office environment featuring the eponymous software engineer. The strip, created by Scott Adams, has run in newspapers since 1989, spawning several books, an animated television series, and numerous tie-in products ranging from stuffed dolls to ice cream.
Dilbert's success can be traced to its all-too-accurate portrayal of corporate culture as a Kafkaesqueesque world of bureaucracy for its own sake: the boss has power, but no skill; the workers have skills, but no power - and as they learn that their skills are not rewarded, they become mere placeholders who see innovation as dangerous and count anonymity as success.
The humor emerges as we see the characters making obviously ridiculous decisions, and we realize that the artificial roles assigned to each member of the corporate culture often require us to do exactly the same thing.
Terms invented by Adams in relation to the strip, and sometimes used by fans in describing their own office environments, include "Induhvidual." This term is based on an American English expression "duh!". The conscious misspelling of individual as induhvidual is a pejorative term for people who are not in the DNRC (Dogbert's New Ruling Class). Its coining is explained in Dilbert Newsletter #6.
The strip has also popularized the usage "cow-orker".
In 2001 Adams collaborated with IDEO, a design company, to come up with the "perfect cubicle". This was fitting since many of the Dilbert strips make fun of the standard Cubicle desk and the environment it creates. The result was both whimsical and practical.
Elbonia is a fictional third-world country that appears in the comic strip. Many of its inhabitants have beards, tall hats, and left-handedness; and the entire area is covered with waist-deep mud. Scott Adams created Elbonia in order to allow for a "foreign" aspect in Dilbert without using any specific country, in order to avoid a backlash by readers who may be from that region.
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2 Dilbert in Popular Culture 3 Dilbert Animated Series Episode Guide 4 See also 5 External Links |
The popularity of the comic strip within the corporate sector has led to the character of Dilbert being used in many business magazines and publications (he has made several appearances on the cover of (Fortune'').
It is the basis of a popular (though unproven) theory suggesting that the morale at a given workplace is the inverse of the number of Dilbert comic strips taped and posted at various desks and cubicles. A larger number of Dilbert comic strips reflects general frustration with the bureaucratic administration at the company; whereas a generally satisfied workforce sees less identification with the character of Dilbert, and consequently fewer Dilbert comic strips are displayed as mementoes.
The adoption of Dilbert as an icon for corporate America has led to Scott Adams being criticized in some circles for allowing his creation to be adopted and embraced by the very same corporate world he was rebelling against when he created the strip.
Characters
Dilbert in Popular Culture
Dilbert Animated Series Episode Guide
Production numbers are in bold.
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