Auto Mechanics: Technology and Expertise in Twentieth-Century America

Auto Mechanics: Technology and Expertise in Twentieth-Century America

by Kevin L. Borg
Auto Mechanics: Technology and Expertise in Twentieth-Century America

Auto Mechanics: Technology and Expertise in Twentieth-Century America

by Kevin L. Borg

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Overview

The history of automobiles is not just the story of invention, manufacturing, and marketing; it is also a story of repair. Auto Mechanics opens the repair shop to historical study—for the first time—by tracing the emergence of a dirty, difficult, and important profession.

Kevin L. Borg's study spans a century of automotive technology—from the horseless carriage of the late nineteenth century to the "check engine" light of the late twentieth. Drawing from a diverse body of source material, Borg explores how the mechanic’s occupation formed and evolved within the context of broad American fault lines of class, race, and gender and how vocational education entwined these tensions around the mechanic’s unique expertise. He further shows how aspects of the consumer rights and environmental movements, as well as the design of automotive electronics, reflected and challenged the social identity and expertise of the mechanic.

In the history of the American auto mechanic, Borg finds the origins of a persistent anxiety that even today accompanies the prospect of taking one's car in for repair.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801893261
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 06/01/2007
Series: Studies in Industry and Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 5 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kevin L. Borg is an associate professor of history at James Madison University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Technology's Middle Ground
1. The Problem with Chauffeur-Mechanics
2. Ad Hoc Mechanics
3. Creating New Mechanics
4. The Automobile in Public Education
5. Tinkering with Sociotechnical Hierarchies
6. Suburban Paradox: Maintaining Automobility in the Postwar Decades
7. "Check Engine": Technology of Distrust
Conclusion: Servants or Savants? Revaluing the Middle Ground
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index

What People are Saying About This

Neil Gladstein

I found the history fascinating and was glad to see [Borg] addressed workplace issues I hear about all the time . . . Although there is a lot of overlap of car/truck mechanics with manufacturing workers we represent who build and fix equipment (machinists, tool & die makers, electricians, etc.), they are a different craft with their own set of issues.

From the Publisher

I found the history fascinating and was glad to see [Borg] addressed workplace issues I hear about all the time . . . Although there is a lot of overlap of car/truck mechanics with manufacturing workers we represent who build and fix equipment (machinists, tool & die makers, electricians, etc.), they are a different craft with their own set of issues.
—Neil Gladstein, International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers

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