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Engineers for Change: Competing Visions of Technology in 1960s America

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An account of conflicts within engineering in the 1960s that helped shape our dominant contemporary understanding of technological change as the driver of history.

In the late 1960s an eclectic group of engineers joined the antiwar and civil rights activists of the time in agitating for change. The engineers were fighting to remake their profession, challenging their fellow engineers to embrace a more humane vision of technology. In Engineers for Change, Matthew Wisnioski offers an account of this conflict within engineering, linking it to deep-seated assumptions about technology and American life.

The postwar period in America saw a near-utopian belief in technology's beneficence. Beginning in the mid-1960s, however, society--influenced by the antitechnology writings of such thinkers as Jacques Ellul and Lewis Mumford--began to view technology in a more negative light. Engineers themselves were seen as conformist organization men propping up the military-industrial complex. A dissident minority of engineers offered critiques of their profession that appropriated concepts from technology's critics. These dissidents were criticized in turn by conservatives who regarded them as countercultural Luddites. And yet, as Wisnioski shows, the radical minority spurred the professional elite to promote a new understanding of technology as a rapidly accelerating force that our institutions are ill-equipped to handle. The negative consequences of technology spring from its very nature--and not from engineering's failures. "Sociotechnologists" were recruited to help society adjust to its technology. Wisnioski argues that in responding to the challenges posed by critics within their profession, engineers in the 1960s helped shape our dominant contemporary understanding of technological change as the driver of history.

286 pages, Hardcover

First published October 12, 2012

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About the author

Matthew Wisnioski

3 books1 follower
Matthew Wisnioski is Associate Professor of Science, Technology, and Society at Virginia Tech and the author of Engineers for Change: Competing Visions of Technology in 1960s America (MIT Press).

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Author 16 books217 followers
September 23, 2015
Solid monograph tracking the competing understandings of engineering and technology during the 1960s and early 1970s. The central tension is between an approach to engineering that emphasizes the internal momentum of technological change and one that emphasizes the political dimensions. Like What the Dormouse Said (about the computer industry) and The Conquest of Cool (about adverting), Engineers for Change emphasizes that despite their staid image/stereotype, numerous engineers were involved in the larger social currents of the decade. Wisnioski covers the development of activist engineering groups working at an angle to professional organizations, the leakage between academic critiques of technology and corporate engineering, and the attempts to alter the place of social sciences and humanities in engineering education.
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