Chapter ID: CBB307277667

Workspace design, ergonomics and gender (1999)

unapi

Control of the worker and of the labor process, in an effort to maximize productivity, has always been of paramount importance for capitalist management. This attempt at control, historically, has been played out in the place of work or, more specifically, in the "space" of work. The capitalist workplace, as contested terrain and as the source of the methodologies of control, has been the focus of the struggle between workers and management (R. Edwards, 1979). The purpose of the paper is to analyze the historical development, utilization and purpose of workspace design. Discussion will center on material means that are used to deskill and control workers while maximizing productivity and therefore, profits. Ergonomics, as applied science and technology, and its manifestation as the means and method of human/machine interface and subsequent control, will be included in the discussion as well. An underlying theme throughout the paper will be the reduction and fragmentation of the human body into isolated, measurable and quantifiable material components, followed by the reassembly of selective components and their subsequent reunification with the machine. Technology will also be discussed as a boundary dissolving force. Specific topics include Taylorism, the effects of capitalism on work and the worker, and the social construction of workspace, including the impact of gender. Workspace design will be viewed as the material manifestation of management's attempt and need to completely isolate and then dominate the worker.

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Authors & Contributors
Rubio, D.
Stimmel, Carol L.
Otterson, L.
Baldassarri, Sandra S.
Degele, Nina
Vogel, William F.
Journals
Technology and Culture
Railroad History
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Business History Review
American Heritage of Invention and Technology
Publishers
IEEE
Harvard University Press
Blackwell
Concepts
Women and technology
Conference proceedings
Management; administration
Technology and gender
Women and Work
Capitalism
People
Pennington, Mary Engle
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
18th century
21st century
17th century
Places
United States
West Indies
Spain
Italy
East Germany
Great Britain
Institutions
Westinghouse Electric Corporation
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