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Title New materials : towards a history of consistency / edited by Amy E. Slaton.

Publication Info. Amherst, Massachusetts : Lever Press, [2020]
©2020

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Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe JSTOR Open Ebooks  Electronic Book    ---  Available
Description 1 online resource (vi, 281 pages) : illustrations (some color)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Summary This edited volume gathers eight cases of industrial materials development, broadly conceived, from North America, Europe and Asia over the last 200 years. Whether given utility as building parts, fabrics, pharmaceuticals, or foodstuffs, whether seen by their proponents as human-made or "found in nature," materials result from the designation of some matter as both knowable and worth knowing about. In following these determinations we learn that the production of physical novelty under industrial, imperial and other cultural conditions has historically accomplished a huge range of social effects, from accruals of status and wealth to demarcations of bodies and geographies. Among other cases, New Materials traces the beneficent self-identity of Quaker asylum planners who devised soundless metal cell locks in the early 19th century, and the inculcation of national pride attending Taiwanese carbon-fiber bicycle parts in the 21st; the racialized labor organizations promoted by California orange breeders in the 1910s, and bureaucratized distributions of blame for deadly high-rise fires a century later. Across eras and global regions New Materials reflects circumstances not made clear when technological innovation is explained solely as a by-product of modernizing impulses or critiqued simply as a craving for profit. Whether establishing the efficacy of nano-scale pharmaceuticals or the tastiness of farmed catfish, proponents of new materials enact complex political ideologies. In highlighting their actors' conceptions of efficiency, certainty, safety, pleasure, pain, faith and identity, the authors reveal that to produce a "new material" is invariably to preserve other things, to sustain existing values and social structures
Funding Sponsored by Lever Press
Note This work is licensed under the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial 4.0 International License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
Information from the publisher.
Subject Materials -- History -- Social aspects.
Manufacturing processes -- History -- Social aspects.
Matériaux -- Histoire -- Aspect social.
Fabrication -- Histoire -- Aspect social.
History.
Indexed Term Industrial materials development
Genre/Form Electronic books.
technical reports.
History
Technical reports.
Rapports techniques.
Added Author Slaton, Amy E., 1957- editor.
Michigan Publishing (University of Michigan), publisher.
In: Books at JSTOR: Open Access JSTOR
OAPEN (Open Access Publishing in European Networks) OAPEN
Other Form: New materials (OCoLC)on1126797375 (DLC) 2019954802
ISBN 9781643150147 (electronic bk.)
1643150146 (electronic bk.)
9781643150130 (print)
Standard No. 10.3998/mpub.11675425 doi
AU@ 000067494759
AU@ 000075798846
AU@ 000075843858
AU@ 000075866722
AU@ 000075882880

 
    
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