Most weekly assignments, other than the books, can be found in one of three places:
Some weekly readings can be found below: 1. January 27Winner, Langdon. “Do Artifacts Have Politics?” in The Whale and the Reactor (University of Chicago Press, 1986): 19-39 2. February 3.Stephen Sledge; Richard DeringerPalmer, Scott W. “Peasants into Pilots: Soviet Air-Mindedness as an Ideology of Dominance,” Technology and Culture 41 (2000): 1-26. Audrey HauganRoberts, Lissa Louise. “An Arcadian Apparatus: The Introduction of the Steam Engine into the Dutch Landscape.” Technology and Culture 45 (2004): 251-276. 3. February 10. RegionAmanda von ArgyriadisPortuondo, Maria M. “Plantation Factories: Science and Technology in Late-Eighteenth-Century Cuba.” Technology and Culture 44 (2003): 231-257. Lee Ann GhajarWorster, Donald. Under Western Skies: Nature and History in the American West (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992).
4. February 17. WarEveryoneWells, H. G. "The Land Ironclads," 1903 [PDF] Mike Reborchick; Brian HuntChurchill, Robert H. “Gun Ownership in Early America: A Survey of Manuscript Militia Returns,” William and Mary Quarterly (2003). [online at the History Cooperative] Roger ConnorKnowles, Anne Kelly. “Labor, Race, and Technology in the Confederate Iron Industry,” Technology and Culture 42 (2001): 1-26. Stephen SledgeStorey, William Kelleher. “Guns, Race, and Skill in Nineteenth-Century Southern Africa.” Technology and Culture 45 (2004): 687-711. 5. February 24. LawRoger Connor; Ray SwiderCantelon, Philip L. “The Origins of Microwave Telephony-Waves of Change.” Technology and Culture 36 (1995): 560-582. Ronald Alexander; David WaltropLubar, Steven. “The Transformation of Antebellum Patent Law.” Technology and Culture 32 (1991): 932-959. 6. March 3. InventionMary LinhartHaring, Kristen. “The ‘Freer Men’ of Ham Radio: How a Technical Hobby Provided Social and Spatial Distance.” Technology and Culture 44 (2003): 734-761. Melissa Hill; David WaltropOwens, Larry. “Patents, the ‘Frontiers’ of American Invention, and the Monopoly Committee of 1939: Anatomy of a Discourse.” Technology and Culture 32 (1991): 1076-1093. 7. March 10. ProductionMike ReborchickAlder, Ken. “Innovation and Amnesia: Engineering Rationality and the Fate of Interchangeable Parts Manufacturing in France.” Technology and Culture 38 (1997): 273-311. Michelle CarrLindstrom, Richard. “‘They all believe they are undiscovered Mary Pickfords’: Workers, Photography, and Scientific Management.” Technology and Culture 41, Number 4, October 2000, pp. 725-751 Giny CheongHecht, Gabrielle. “Political Designs: Nuclear Reactors and National Policy in Postwar France,” Technology and Culture 35 (1994): 657-85. 8. March 24. ProfessionJason SutphinBrown, John K. “Design Plans, Working Drawings, National Styles: Engineering Practice in Great Britain and the United States, 1775-1945.” Technology and Culture 41 (2000): 195-238. Thomas FerrellMeiksins, Peter. “The ‘Revolt of the Engineers’ Reconsidered.” Technology and Culture, Vol. 29, No. 2. (Apr., 1988), pp. 219-246. Lee Ann GhajarReynolds, Terry S. “Defining Professional Boundaries: Chemical Engineering in the Early 20th Century.” Technology and Culture 27 (1986): 694-716. James SafleySeely, Bruce E. “The Scientific Mystique in Engineering: Highway Research at the Bureau of Public Roads, 1918-1940.” Technology and Culture 25 (1984): 798-831. 9. March 31. ConsumptionEveryoneCowan, Ruth Schwartz. “The Consumption Junction: A Proposal for Research Strategies in the Sociology of Technology,” in Wiebe E. Bijker, et al., eds., The Social Construction of Technological Systems (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1987), 261-280. Mary LinhartGreenberg, Joshua Mark. “From Betamax to Blockbuster: Mediation in the Consumption Junction” (Ph.D. diss., Cornell University, 2004), chapter 1. Michelle Carr; Lessia P. ShatalinZachmann, Karin. “A Socialist Consumption Junction: Debating the Mechanization of Housework in East Germany, 1956-1957.” Technology and Culture 43 (2002): 73-99. 10. April 7. LaborMelissa Hill, Jason SutphinBorg, Kevin. “The ‘Chauffeur Problem’ in the Early Auto Era: Structuration Theory and the Users of Technology.” Technology and Culture 40 (1999): 797-832 Amanda von ArgyriadisMohun, Arwen Palmer. “Laundrymen Construct Their World: Gender and the Transformation of a Domestic Task to an Industrial Process.” Technology and Culture 38 (1997): 97-120. 11. April 14. FantasyRichard DeringerBelasco, Warren. “Algae Burgers for a Hungry World? The Rise and Fall of Chlorella Cuisine.” Technology and Culture 38 (1997): 608-634. James Safley, Giny CheongSchatzberg, Eric. “Ideology and Technical Choice: The Decline of the Wooden Airplane in the United States, 1920-1945.” Technology and Culture 35 (1994): 34-69. 12. April 21. ExhibitionEveryoneRead George Basalla , “Museums and Technological Utopianism,” in Ian M.G. Quimby and Polly Anne Earl (eds), Technological Innovation and the Decorative Arts, Winterthur Conference Report,1973 (Charlottesville: University of Virginia, 1974), 355-373 [PDF] Attend one museum exhibit or historic site with a technology theme, and write up a review in the style of a Technology and Culture exhibit review. (For examples, search the T&C database within Project Muse for "exhibit review.") 13. April 28. SimulationRonald AlexanderDowney, Greg. “Virtual Webs, Physical Technologies, and Hidden Workers: The Spaces of Labor in Information Internetworks.” Technology and Culture 42 (2001): 209-235. Thomas Ferrell; Ray SwiderLessig, Lawrence. “The Laws of Cyberspace” (1998), http://www.lessig.org/content/articles/works/laws_cyberspace.pdf 14. May 5. ChoicesMary LinhartPinch, T. J. “‘Should One Applaud?’ Breaches and Boundaries in the Reception of New Technology in Music.” Technology and Culture 44 (2003): 536-559. Audrey HauganSpiller, James. “Radiant Cuisine: The Commercial Fate of Food Irradiation in the United States.” Technology and Culture 45 (2004): 740-763. |
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