Reviews
No historian before [Bix] has examined systematically what she rightly calls the American debate over the role of machines in either reducing or increasing jobs... A first-rate historical study that simultaneously speaks to our high-tech present.
Amy Bix's fine book, carefully researched and gracefully written, surveys the extent of everyday hardship during the Great Depression. She concentrates on the debates over technological unemployment in the United States, debates that were 'entwined with particular musings about the meaning of American history, the western frontier, and a sense of national destiny.'.
This book succeeds splendidly as an intellectual history of automation as it has been generally understood for most of this century by business and labor leaders, intellectuals, engineers, politicians, and publicists.
This superb account of the uproar, beginning in the 1930s, over 'technological unemployment' brings to life an unexplored area of popular economics and policy debate through much of the twentieth century.
A very thorough and balanced analysis.
Inventing Ourselves Out of Jobs? is an able and lucidly written account of the ongoing debate in the United States over the effects of technology on employment.
It is to be hoped her book stimulates interest and provides the basis for further inquiry into the consequences of these aspects of the Information Revolution.
This excellent study examines the multiple strands of concern about the threat to employment posed by mechanisation and automation, with the primary focus being on attitudes during the 1930s.
Focusing on how the Depression impelled a national debate over technological unemployment, Bix examines the terms of that debate while exploring what it has to tell us about ourselves and our views about technology and progress. She makes plain early on that the debate was a proxy for something more profound: the uneasy American relation to the Machine Age and its progressive claims.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Technolocy as Progress?
Chapter 1. "Economy of a Madhouse": Entering the Depression-Era Debate over Technological Unemployment
Chapter 2. "Finding Jobs Faster Than Invention Can
Acknowledgments
Prologue: Technolocy as Progress?
Chapter 1. "Economy of a Madhouse": Entering the Depression-Era Debate over Technological Unemployment
Chapter 2. "Finding Jobs Faster Than Invention Can Take Them Away": Government's Role in the Technological Unemployment Debate
Chapter 3. "No Power on Earth Can Stop Improved Machinery": Labor's Concern about Displacement
Chapter 4. "Machinery Don't Eat": Displacement as a theme in Depression Culture
Chapter 5. "The Machine Has Been Libeled": The Business Community's Defense
Chapter 6. "Innocence or Guilt of Science": Scientists and Engineers Mobilize to Justify Mechanization
Chapter 7. "What Will the Smug Machine Age Do?": Envisioning Past, Present, and Future as America moves from Depression to War
Chapter 8. "Automation Just Killed Us": The Displacement Question in Postwar America
Epilogue: Revisiting the Technological Unemployment Debate
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index