A Social History of American Technology

For over 250 years American technology has been regarded as a unique hallmark of American culture and an important factor in American prosperity. Despite this American history has rarely been told from the perspective of the history of technology. A Social History of American Technology surveys the history of American technology from the tools used by the earliest native inhabitants to the technological systems—cars and computers, aircraft and antibiotics—we are familiar with today. The book explains how various technologies have affected the ways in which Americans work, govern, cook, transport, communicate, maintain their health, and reproduce.

Ruth Schwartz Cowan demonstrates that technological change has always been closely related to social development, and explores the multiple, complex relationships that have existed between such diverse social agents as households and businesses, the scientific community and the defense establishment, artists and inventors. Divided into three sections—colonial America, industrialization, the 20th century—A Social History of American Technology is ideal for courses in American social and economic history, as a correlated text for the American history survey, as well as for courses that focus on the history of American technology. It offers students the unique opportunity to learn not only how profoundly technological change has affected the American way of life, but how profoundly the American way of life has affected technology.

A Social History of American Technology is available for purchase from Oxford University Press and Amazon.com.

Contact:
Department of the History and Sociology of Science
University of Pennsylvania
Suite 303, Claudia Cohen Hall
249 S. 36th Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104
rcowan@sas.upenn.edu

Ruth's Penn Web page