Wiebe Bijker: Of Bicycles, Bakelites, and Bulbs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Wiebe Bijker: Of Bicycles, Bakelites, and Bulbs

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Title: Wiebe Bijker: Of Bicycles, Bakelites, and Bulbs


1
Wiebe Bijker Of Bicycles, Bakelites, and Bulbs
  • Toward a Theory of Sociotechnical Change

2
Introduction
  • Understanding the place of technology in our
    lives and in our society.
  • Examples from three technological advances
  • The safety bicycle
  • Bakelite plastic
  • Fluorescent bulbs
  • Technology and society are human constructs

3
Bijker (beé-ker)
  • Dutch engineering student in the 1970s
  • Drawn to Science Technology Society movement
    (STS)
  • Risks of nuclear energy
  • Environmental degradation
  • Followed Social Construction of Technology
    apprach (SCOT)

4
Classification, bad
  • Tried to dissolve STS boundaries
  • Seamless web
  • Abhorred linear thinking

5
A vague diagram
6
Summary
  • Technological inventions are created within
    society cannot be viewed distinctly
  • Gives three concrete stories and ties them in to
    their societal frameworks
  • Keywords
  • Relevant Social Group
  • Interpretive Flexibility Closure/Stabilization
  • Technological Frame
  • Power

7
Part 1 Of Bicycles
8
Part 1 Of Bicycles
  • Early 19th century, Baron von Drais draisenne

9
Part 1 Of Bicycles
  • Early 19th century, Baron von Drais draisienne

10
Part 1 Of Bicycles
11
Part 1 Of Bicycles
12
Part 1 Of Bicycles
13
Part 1 Of Bicycles
14
Part 1 Of Bicycles
15
Part 1 Of Bicycles
  • Relevant user group are the social groups
    centered around the technology, in this case, the
    Ordinary bicycle.
  • Users Young men of means and nerve
  • Non-users Everybody else
  • Manufacturers industrialized machine industries
    de-stabilized by Franco-German war

16
Part 1 Of Bicycles
  • Interpretive flexibility the definition of the
    artifact according to the relevant user group
  • For young men of means and nerve it is a
    working technology, slightly dangerous, but that
    was, partly, the point.
  • For everybody else it is a non-working
    technology. It was unsafe.
  • For manufacturers how do you develop it for
    wider use?

17
Part 1 Of Bicycles
18
Part 1 Of Bicycles
19
Part 1 Of Bicycles
20
The Fourth Kingdom
  • The Social Construction of Bakelite

21
Baekeland
Lone inventor?
22
Two New Concepts
  • Technological Frame
  • Degree of Inclusion
  • But first, some background to the story of
    Bakelite

23
What is Bakelite?
  • Trademark for a molding material patented by
    Baekeland in 1907
  • Formed in condensation reaction that occurs when
    phenol and formaldehyde are combined
  • Insoluble, infusible, and unaffected by other
    chemicals
  • First truly synthetic plastic
  • Moldable but hardens

24
Precursors to Bakelite and Relevant Social Groups
  • Old Plastics
  • Resin, horn, tortoiseshells, ivory, etc. (luxury
    market)
  • New Plastics Made from Natural Materials
  • Rubber useful but ugly
  • Celluloid useful but flammable
  • Search for Synthetic Plastics
  • Concern about scarcity of natural resources
  • Precursors created demand for consumer products
    (emergence of new social group)
  • Phenol-formaldehyde experiments

25
Discovery of Bakelite
  • Turn-of-the-Century
  • Phenol-formaldehyde research in disarray
  • Baekeland tries to find patterns in chaos
  • Applies for patent for product he calls Bakelite
  • Product A Liquid
  • Product B Elastic
  • Product C Hard yet gummy
  • Product D Hard and insoluble
  • Laboratory notes show he was interested in
    commercial applications

26
Technological Frame
  • Each relevant social group has own Technological
    Frame
  • Builds when relevant social groups interact
    around an artifact
  • Provides the goals, ideas and tools needed for
    action (solving problems)
  • Outcome is constrained by the social group, but
    outcome is not predetermined.
  • Also applies to non-technical groups such as
    consumers, managers, politicians, etc.

27
Degree of Inclusion
  • As actors can be members of more than one
    relevant social group, they can also be
    influenced by more than one technological frame
  • Degree of inclusion in a technological frame
    depends on extent to which an actors
    interactions are structured by that frame
  • Bijker Innovation often comes from inclusion in
    more than one technological frame

28
Baekelands Inclusion in Technological Frames
  • Photochemist
  • Experience as photochemist (inventor of
    photographic paper) led him to attempt to map all
    possible variables of the phenol-formaldehyde
    reaction
  • Electrochemist
  • Interested in producing raw materials for
    industry (not consumer products)
  • Businessman
  • Interested in whether processes can be scaled up

29
The Social Construction of Bakelite
Early Contacts with Industry
Museums
Consumers
Patent Litigation
Industrial Designers
Collaboration with Industry
World War I
30
The social construction of fluorescent lighting
  • The majesty of daylight

31
Overview
  • Lightbulbs invented in 1880 by Edison
  • This chapter focuses on 1938-1940s
  • Interplay between INDUSTRY, GOVERNMENT
    CONSUMERS
  • Engineers had devised fluorescent lighting long
    before the socially constructed final product
    appeared

32
Key players
  • 1890s
  • MAZDA LIGHTING
  • Comprised GE and Westinghouse
  • UTILITIES
  • FIXTURE MANUFACTURERS
  • PUBLIC
  • GOVERNMENT

33
Consolidation
  • 1901
  • GE, Westinghouse, Others
  • Others consolidate into National Electric Lamp
    Company.
  • GE provided capital by purchasing 75 of stock
  • GE owns 97 of U.S. electric lighting market

34
GENERAL ELECTRICAntitrust/Mergers/Cross-licensin
g
35
Utility companies
  • Private companies, collective organizaton
  • Organized as licensees of Mazda
  • Dependencies
  • Understandings
  • Utilities promoted Mazda lamps
  • Mazda promoted higher consumption

36
Fixture companies
  • No electric co. made accessories
  • RLM Standards Institute
  • Established industry standards
  • Favored Mazda
  • (who happened to collaborate in the
    standardization)

37
1930s
  • Despite Great Depressionbelief in technology
  • Technology was the buzzword
  • Object, process, knowledge, symbol
  • ElectricitySymbol!
  • Sense of wonder

38
Worlds Fair 1939
  • http//xroads.virginia.edu/1930s/DISPLAY/39wf/fro
    nt.htm
  • Utopian
  • Introduced new technologies, including
    fluorescent lightingan opportunity!

39
From tint to daylight
  • Originally for tint lightingspecialty
  • High-efficiency daylight fluorescent
  • 3 to 200 times as much light for the same
    wattage
  • Amazing efficiency
  • Most economical
  • Indoor daylight at last.

40
Uh-oh Relevant Social Groups
  • Utilities feared lost revenues
  • Tried to emphasize the tinted aspect
  • Even Mazda was concerned
  • How long would this bulb last?
  • Independents
  • Hygrade-Sylvania
  • Public
  • Fixture Makers

41
Nela Park Conference
  • April 24-25, 1939 in Cleveland
  • Fluorescent Council of War
  • Create High-Intensity Daylight Lamp
  • Nix High-Efficiency Lamp

42
GE vs. the Govt.
  • GEs power continues through WWII
  • 2 lawsuits involving GE were dismissed because
    they interfered with the war effort
  • Military was using fluorescent bulbs

43
POWER
  • Transitive capacity to harness the agency of
    others to comply with ones ends.
  • Is exercised, not possessed
  • Previously
  • Economists would talk of technology without
    mentioning social power
  • Sociologist would not discuss technological power.

44
Semiotic power
  • Reaching closure, where interpretive flexibility
    is reduced, is the first step of semiotic power.
  • Which means
  • More people in a relevant social group
  • New relevant social groups
  • Elaborating the meaning of artifacts

45
Constraints Enablers
  • Stabilization results in fixity of meaning
  • Fixity of meaning represents power.
  • Shapes technological frames which specify actions
    of relevant social group members
  • Constrain actions (no high-efficiency bulbs)
  • Enable actions routines, patents
  • Removes controversy from history
  • GE ads for high-intensity
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