Technology and the Making of the Netherlands: The Age of Contested Modernization, 1890-1970 (The MIT Press)
By
Johan Schot (Contributor) Harry Lintsen (Contributor) Arie Rip (Contributor) Johan Schot (Contributor) Arie Rip (Contributor) Erik van der Vleuten (Contributor) Adrienne van den Bogaard (Contributor) Rienk Vermij (Contributor) Peter Baggen (Contributor) Jasper Faber (Contributor)
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Description
An account of the trajectory of modernization through technology in the Netherlands.
This study offers both an account of twentieth-century technology in the Netherlands and a view of Dutch history through the lens of technology. It describes the trajectory of modernization through technology in certain characteristically Dutch contexts-including the omnipresence of water, the pervasiveness of urbanization coupled with a high-tech agricultural sector, and the legacy of colonialism-but at the same time makes it clear that Dutch struggles over technology choices, infrastructure development, mass production, and the role of government are comparable to the experience of any Western industrialized country.
The book, which synthesizes findings originally presented in a series of seven volumes published in the Netherlands, uses the idea of contested modernization as an overarching concept through which to understand Dutch technological history. The modernizers of Dutch society-including engineers, management consultants, architects, and others-did not always agree on how to modernize; moreover, the unruliness of specific practices often derailed or redirected implementation. Tensions between top-down and bottom-up modernization, and between scale-enlargement and more flexible arrangements of mutual coordination and cooperation shaped Dutch history.
The chapters examine such topics as attempts to create an industrial nation, materially connected through infrastructure; the conflicts that came with the arrival of mass production and the emergence of a consumer society; and land-use planning in a low-lying country.
About the Author
Johan Schot is a Professor of the History of Technology at the Eindhoven University of Technology. Harry Lintsen is a Professor of the History of Technology at the Eindhoven University of Technology. Arie Rip is Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology in the School of Management and Governance of the University of Twente. Johan Schot is a Professor of the History of Technology at the Eindhoven University of Technology. Arie Rip is Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology in the School of Management and Governance of the University of Twente.
More Details
- Contributor: Johan Schot
- Imprint: MIT Press
- ISBN13: 9780262013628
- Number of Pages: 640
- Packaged Dimensions: 152x229x47mm
- Packaged Weight: 1452
- Format: Hardback
- Publisher: MIT Press Ltd
- Release Date: 2010-01-15
- Series: The MIT Press
- Binding: Hardback
- Biography: Johan Schot is a Professor of the History of Technology at the Eindhoven University of Technology. Harry Lintsen is a Professor of the History of Technology at the Eindhoven University of Technology. Arie Rip is Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology in the School of Management and Governance of the University of Twente. Johan Schot is a Professor of the History of Technology at the Eindhoven University of Technology. Arie Rip is Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology in the School of Management and Governance of the University of Twente.
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