Technology's Storytellers: Reweaving the Human Fabric
By (Author) John M. Staudenmaier
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
6th September 1989
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
607.2
Paperback
312
Width 152mm, Height 226mm, Spine 20mm
522g
Technology's Storytellers documents the emergence of the history of technology as a coherent intellectual discipline. Based on an analysis of nearly 300 articles published in Technology and Culture, it proposes a mode of historical research as a communal rather than an individualistic endeavor-looking for patterns of consensus in the authors' choice of time periods, geographical locations, and types of technology to study. It discusses the recurrent themes of the relationship between science and technology and the cultural ambience of technology, and examines the extent to which historians are moving away from a once pervasive ideology of autonomous technological progress. Co-published with the Society for the History of Technology.
A lucid, richly detailed review of attempts to establish the history of technology as a fully respectable research field... For humanists, engineers, and scientists interested in the relationship of technology to broader currents of social thought, this book will be a useful and enduring resource.
-- Langdon Winner * Science *John M. Staudenmaier, S. J., teaches at the University of Detroit.