Searching for a "rational" workplace, turn-of-the-century
engineers and industrial architects recast the factory itself in
the image of the machine. Indeed, they considered the factory
building the "master machine," containing and coordinating all of
the machinery within. Such rational factory planning improved
production speed and the management of workers. Once created, the
rational factory transformed the nature of work, both human and
mechanical.
In "The Rational Factory, " Lindy Biggs contends that factory
design played a crucial role in the development of American mass
production. Her interdisciplinary study draws from the fields of
business history, engineering, technology, architecture, and
theories of modernity. Why did some people want to rationalize the
factory, she asks, and how did the system impact those who worked
under it?
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