I think there’s something in business that is similar to the hero-sidekick dichotomy you suggest. In business, I see people who are great individual contributors, but their career path “upwards” takes them into management, at which they suck. The notion that being good at managing doers is “higher” than doing has a parallel in supposed superiority of heroes to sidekicks. It’s not a promotion to go from sidekick to hero: it might very well be an awkward misalignment.
Is there something underlying both of these? It might be something about leader-follower and the prestige that comes with being a leader.
I think there’s something in business that is similar to the hero-sidekick dichotomy you suggest. In business, I see people who are great individual contributors, but their career path “upwards” takes them into management, at which they suck. The notion that being good at managing doers is “higher” than doing has a parallel in supposed superiority of heroes to sidekicks. It’s not a promotion to go from sidekick to hero: it might very well be an awkward misalignment.
Is there something underlying both of these? It might be something about leader-follower and the prestige that comes with being a leader.