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[ecrea] New book: Hot Metal: Material Culture & Tangible Labour
Wed Nov 30 17:24:23 GMT 2016
Just a quick note to announce the recent publication of my book: Hot
Metal: Material Culture and Tangible Labour
<http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/9781784994341/>, published
by Manchester University Press in the Studies in Design & Material
Culture Series.
/Hot Metal/is a cross-disciplinary title that sits somewhere between
material culture studies, labour history and oral history studies of
working life. It focuses on the experiences of workers from the old NSW
Government Printing Office (looking at the years 1959-1989), as they
shifted from hot metal typesetting and letterpress, to computer
typesetting and offset-lithography, and then promptly lost their jobs
(under the NSW Greiner government).
Apologies in advance for academic book pricing - not my decision. Book
Depository is probably the best bet but even then it's a shocker:
http://www.bookdepository.com/Hot-Metal/9781784994341
*Synopsis*
*
*
The world of work is tightly entwined with the world of things. /Hot
Metal/ illuminates connections between design, material culture and
labour between the 1960s and the 1980s, when the traditional crafts of
hot-metal typesetting and letterpress were finally made obsolete with
the introduction of computerised technologies. This multidisciplinary
history provides an evocative rendering of design culture by exploring
an intriguing case: a doggedly traditional Government Printing Office in
Australia. It explores the struggles experienced by printers as they
engaged in technological retraining, shortly before facing factory
closure. Topics explored include spatial memory within oral history,
gender-labour tensions, the rise of neoliberalism and the secret making
of objects 'on the side'. This book will appeal to researchers in design
and social history, labour history, material culture and gender studies.
*Table of Contents*
Introduction: labour, design and culture
Part I: Image, space, voice
1. The visual at work: oral history and institutional photographs
2. Spatial and architectural memory in oral histories of working life
Part II: Technological transitions
3. The continuity of craft masculinities: from letterpress to
offset-lithography
4. 'Going with the technology': the final generation of hot-metal
compositors
Part III: Challenges and creative resilience
5. (Re)making spaces and 'working out ways': women in the printing industry
6. Making things on the side: creativity at a time of institutional decline
7. Conclusion: factory closures, material culture and loss
Index
For review copy inquiries, please contact Bethan Hirst at MUP,
(Bethan.Hirst /at/ manchester.ac.uk) <mailto:(Bethan.Hirst /at/ manchester.ac.uk)>.
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