Progress Without People: New Technology, Unemployment, and the Message of Resistance

A provocative discussion of the role of technology and its accompanying rhetoric of limitless progress in the concomitant rise of joblessness and unemployment.

1112387131
Progress Without People: New Technology, Unemployment, and the Message of Resistance

A provocative discussion of the role of technology and its accompanying rhetoric of limitless progress in the concomitant rise of joblessness and unemployment.

10.99 In Stock
Progress Without People: New Technology, Unemployment, and the Message of Resistance

Progress Without People: New Technology, Unemployment, and the Message of Resistance

by David F. Noble
Progress Without People: New Technology, Unemployment, and the Message of Resistance

Progress Without People: New Technology, Unemployment, and the Message of Resistance

by David F. Noble

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Overview

A provocative discussion of the role of technology and its accompanying rhetoric of limitless progress in the concomitant rise of joblessness and unemployment.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781926662299
Publisher: Between the Lines
Publication date: 05/02/1995
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 184
File size: 643 KB

About the Author


David F. Noble is Professor of History at York University in Toronto. He is the author of several books, including Beyond the Promised Land, Digital Diploma Mills, and A World Without Women.


In America by Design, A World without Women, The Religion of Technology, and Digital Diploma Mills (BTL, 2002), David F. Noble has reshaped our understanding of the evolution of technology, religion, and education.

Table of Contents

**Preface


Introduction


Part One:** Another Look at Progress
1 In Defence of Luddism
2 The Machinery Question Revisited
3 Present-Tense Technology



Part Two: Automation Madness: Or, the Unautomatic History of Automation
4 Automatic Technological Progress
5 A Second Look at Social Progress
6 The Hearings on Industrial Policy: A Statement
7 The Religion of Technology: The Myth of a Masculine Millennium



Appendices
I
Nineteenth-Century Consultant to Industry Saw Automation as Weaponry
II Karl Marx against the Luddites
III A Technology Bill of Rights from the International Association of Machinists
IV “Starvin’ in Paradise” with the New Technology
V Lord Byron Speaks against a Bill to Introduce the Death Penalty for Machine-Breaking
VI An Exchange between Norbert Wiener, Father of Cybernetics, and Walter Reuther, UAW President



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