After the American Century
The assembly line was invented in 1913 and has been in continuous operation ever since. It has spread to every industrial nation and has become the most familiar form of mass production. Some corporations that adopted it made enormous profits; others went bankrupt. It has been praised as a boon to all working men and women, yet it has also been condemned as a merciless form of exploitation. It has inspired novels, poems, popular songs, and even a short symphonic work, but it has also inspired satire and visions of apocalypse. It was embraced by both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, yet Americans believed that the production lines of Detroit ensured the victory of democracy in both World War II and the Cold War. More recently, it was reinvented in Japan and exported back to the United States as lean production.
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Early example of moving assembly line |
As the assembly line spread, its effects varied. Between 1914 and 1940 a
few nations and some industries embraced it rapidly, others slowly, and
some not at all. European nations adopted it more slowly, even after
World War II, preferring the flexibility of skilled workers over the
standardization of semi-skilled work on assembly lines. In more recent
decades, mass- production industries have gradually moved away from the
expensive labor markets of Western Europe and the United States to less
costly venues in Asia and Latin America. Once the engine of US
prosperity, the assembly line now increasingly drives competing
economies elsewhere. Its complex social and economic effects have become
global.
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Bomber production during World War II |
The assembly line emerged in a specific place (Detroit), at a specific time (between 1908 and 1913), in a specific industry (the automobile industry). But it also expressed trends in American society that can be discerned during the nineteenth century. It was the culmination of decades of labor-saving devices, new management ideas, improvements in metal alloys, increasing precision in machine tools, and experimentation with production. Yet that this form of production should be invented in the United States was not inevitable. The elements that came together to form the assembly line could also be found in France, in Germany, and in Britain. Any of the other industrial nations might have hit upon it first. Nevertheless, the United States proved particularly suitable for its emergence. A cultural context either fosters or resists a new technology. Before Henry Ford was born, speed, acceleration, innovation, interchangeable parts, uniformity, and economies of scale already were valued in the United States, where the values that the assembly line would embody were woven into everyday life.
The assembly line was created at Ford’s factories was not a final result, but a part of an ongoing cultural process.
America's Assembly Line is a centennial history of this central technology and its effects on work, leisure, and everyday life.
David E. Nye,
America's Assembly Line MIT Press
Published Feb 15, 2013
ISBN-10: 0262018713 ISBN-13: 978-0262018715
"To make sense of their twenty-first-century world, people need to
understand the profound influence of the twentieth-century technology
known as the assembly line. David Nye's sweeping analysis of the origins
and development of 'the line' is the place to start." --
Robert Casey, former Senior Curator of Transportation, Henry Ford Museum
"It
is hard to think of a manufacturing technology that has had a greater
economic and social impact than the moving assembly line. In
America's Assembly Line,
David Nye shows us how this new technology emerged, expanded, stalled,
and was reinvented, setting in train the age of mass production and
consumerism as well as many of the subsequent environmental problems we
experience today. Nye's beautifully nuanced and perceptive treatment of
the subject indicates why he is one of the most distinguished historians
of technology and culture working today." --
Merritt Roe Smith, Cutten Professor of the History of Technology, MIT
"Crafted with immense erudition,
America's Assembly Line
is a fascinating cultural history, combining extensive archival
research and theoretical sophistication. Nye shows how America's growing
economy in the twentieth century was powered by the assembly line and
how deeply this 'general purpose technology' was intertwined with
American culture, from the exuberance of the Rockettes to the dysphoria
of the American worker. He offers a lucid, historically informed reading
of the problems that beset America today, in a changed global economy
that has adapted assembly-line technology to its advantage even as the
American worker has been marginalized." --
Miles Orvell, Temple University, author of
The Death and Life of Main Street: Small Towns in American Memory, Space, and Community
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