Reprints 15 articles from various issues of Technology and Culture between 1963 and 1996. In roughly chronological order they trace the impact of technology throughout the history of the US, surveying a variety of time periods, themes, and technologies. Among them are bursting boilers and federal power, George Eastman and mass amateur photography, and the electron microscope. Useful in an undergraduate course, and accessible to general readers. A sister volume widens the focus to all of western culture. Paper edition (unseen), $18.95. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
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Technology and American History explores the technological dimension of American life from the birth of American industry in the late eighteenth century to the massive industrial systems of the late twentieth century. Emphasizing a societal context for technology, this carefully organized collection demonstrates both the manner in which cultural, political, and economic forces shape innovation, and the ways that technology has influenced society and shaped its values. Individual essays explore the importance of textile manufacturing in American industrialization, the role of the federal government in regulating new modes of transport, the development of interchangeable parts in production, the process of innovation, the notion of technological systems, and the relationship between technological change and work in the factory, on the farm, and in the home.The essays were selected to be accessible to both the general reader and the undergraduate student.
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