Thesis ID: CBB001567323

Post-Industrial Engineering: Computer Science and the Organization of White-Collar Work, 1945--1975 (2011)

unapi

Mamo, Andrew Benedict (Author)


University of California, Berkeley
Carson, Cathryn L.
Hollinger, David A.
Winickoff, David E
Hollinger, David A.
Winickoff, David E


Publication Date: 2011
Edition Details: Advisor: Carson, Cathryn L; Committee Members: Hollinger, David A., Winickoff, David E.
Physical Details: 243 pp.
Language: English

The development of computing after the Second World War involved a fundamental reassessment of information, communication, knowledge--and work. No merely technical project, it was prompted in part by the challenges of industrial automation and the shift toward white-collar work in mid-century America. This dissertation therefore seeks out the connections between technical research projects and organization-theory analyses of industrial management in the Cold War years. Rather than positing either a model of technological determinism or one of social construction, it gives a more nuanced description by treating the dynamics as one of constant social and technological co-evolution. This dissertation charts the historical development of what it has meant to work with computers by examining the deep connections between technologists and mid-century organization theorists from the height of managerialism in the 1940s through the decline of the "liberal consensus" in the 1970s. Computing was enmeshed in ongoing debates concerning automation and the relationship between human labor and that of machines. The work that would become known as "artificial intelligence" grew out of studies of mental work in an attempt to automate the process of making routine decisions within large organizations. Likewise, the technical content of operating systems and programs reinforced ideas about what constituted meaningful labor, even as they created a new basis for assessing the value of mental work. The development of these technologies occurred in a direct relationship with ongoing conversations about American economic development in the 1950s and 1960s. By the mid-1960s, large computer systems were viewed through the prism of the Great Society, while smaller minicomputers were associated with a libertarian backlash. The direct experiences of working with different machines provided a foundation for rethinking the organization of the American office and the place of mental work within an "Information Age."

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 72/12, Jun 2012. Proquest Document ID: 893004989.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567323/

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Authors & Contributors
Schlombs, Corinna
Downey, Greg
Massimo Ciccozzi
Elzway, Salem
J. Jesse Ramirez
Joy Marie Lisi Rankin
Journals
Technikgeschichte: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Technik und Industrie
Osiris: A Research Journal Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
IEEE Technology and Society Magazine
The Bridge: Journal of the National Academy of Engineering
Blätter für Technikgeschichte
Publishers
Oxford University Press
University of North Carolina Press
University of Massachusetts Press
The MIT Press
Routledge
Lexington Books
Concepts
Automation
Labor and laborers
Technology and society
Cold War
Industry
Artificial intelligence
People
Kurtz, Thomas E.
Kemeny, John G. (1926-1993)
Wiener, Norbert
Plato
Frayn, Michael
Clarke, Arthur C.
Time Periods
20th century
21st century
20th century, late
19th century
18th century
17th century
Places
United States
Middle and Near East
Saudi Arabia
Americas
Germany
Minnesota (U.S.)
Institutions
Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium
Dartmouth University
RAND Corporation
Stanford University
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT
International Business Machines Corporation
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