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Gender and Technology: A Reader


Gender and Technology: A Reader

Paperback by Lerman, Nina (Whitman College); Oldenziel, Ruth; Mohun, Arwen P. (University of Delaware)

Gender and Technology: A Reader

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£28.05

ISBN:
9780801872594
Publication Date:
10 Dec 2003
Language:
English
Publisher:
Johns Hopkins University Press
Pages:
480 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 2 - 4 May 2024
Gender and Technology: A Reader

Description

For most of human experience, certainly of late, the artifacts of technological civilization have become closely associated with gender, sometimes for physiological reasons (brassieres or condoms, for example) but more often because of social and cultural factors, both obvious and obscure. Because these stereotypes necessarily have economic, social, and political consequences, understanding how gender shapes the ways we view and use technology-and how technology shapes our concept of gender-has emerged as a matter of serious scholarly importance. Gender and Technology brings together leading historians of technology to explore this entwined and reciprocal relationship, focusing on the tools (cars, typewriters, computers, vibrators), industries (dressmaking, steam laundering, cigar making, meat packing) and places (factories, offices, homes) of North America between 1850 and 1950. Together, these essays reveal the ways in which technology and gender-far from being essential, immutable categories-develop historically as social constructions. Contributors: Patricia Cooper, University of Kentucky; Paul N. Edwards, University of Michigan; Wendy Gamber, Indiana University; Carolyn M. Goldstein, Lowell National Historical Park, Lowell, Massachusetts; Rebecca Herzig, Bates College; Roger Horowitz, Hagley Museum and Library, Wilmington, Delaware; Ronald R. Kline, Cornell University; Jennifer Light, Northwestern University; Rachel P. Maines, Cornell University's Hotel School Library; Judith A. McGaw; Joy Parr, Simon Fraser University.

Contents

Acknowledgments Introduction: Interrogating Boundaries Part I: Entwined Categories: Gender Constructs Technology Chapter 1. Why Feminine Technologies Matter Chapter 2. Why Masculine Technologies Matter Chapter 3. Situated Technology: Meanings Chapter 4. Situated Technology: Camouflage Part II: Entwined Categories: Technology Constructs Gender Chapter 5. Industrial Genders: Constructing Boundaries Chapter 6. Industrial Genders: Home/Factory Chapter 7. Industrial Genders: Soft/Hard Part III: Industrial Junctions: Gendering Industrial Technologies Chapter 8. Cigarmaking Chapter 9. Dressmaking Chapter 10. Meatpacking Chapter 11. Programming Part IV: Industrial Junctions: Technologies of Industrial Genders Chapter 12. Economics and Homes: Agency Chapter 13. Home EconomiesL Mediators Chapter 14. Home Ideologies: Progress? The Shoulders We Stand On/The View From Here: Historiography and Directions For Research Instructor's Notes on Organization List of Contributors Index

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