Hot metal
Material culture and tangible labour
Jesse Stein. Series edited by Bill Sherman, Christopher Breward
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Hot metal is the first book of its kind to unpack the fundamental interconnections between design, material culture and labour in the context of deindustrialisation. It centres on the lives of printing industry workers between the 1960s and the 1980s, who experienced the disruptive technological change from hot-metal typesetting and letterpress printing to computerisation and offset-lithography, shortly before facing factory closure and the obsolescence of their craft skills. This book provides new perspectives on how the world of work is intertwined with the tangible and affective worlds of materiality. It argues that workplace culture is not just the sum of sociopolitical relationships, but is also bound up with a world of things. Through things, the social and gendered processes of workplace life are enacted and experienced. The book integrates oral histories and archival photographs from an intriguing case: a doggedly traditional Government Printing Office in Australia, providing an evocative rendering of design culture and embodied practice. The chapters examine spatial and visual memory within frameworks of oral history, gender-technology tensions, workers' strategies for survival, the rise of neoliberalism and the clandestine making of objects 'on the side'. Hot metal is an engaging multidisciplinary text that will appeal to scholars in design history, material culture studies, labour history, the history of technology, gender studies and beyond. It is an accessible, richly argued text that will benefit students seeking to learn about the nature and erosion of blue-collar work, the integration of oral history with visual and material culture and the history of the printing as a craft.
Author Biography
Jesse Adams Stein is Chancellor's Research Fellow in the School of Design at the University of Technology, Sydney
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press is a leading UK publisher known for excellent research in the humanities and social sciences.
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Bibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date October 2016
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781784994341 / 1784994340
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatHardback
- Primary Price 75 GBP
- Pages232
- ReadershipGeneral
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions240 x 170 mm
- Illustration45 black & white illustrations
- Biblio NotesIntroduction: 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
- SeriesStudies in Design and Material Culture
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