Preface. Acknowledgements. 1. Lash-Ups: Goods and Bads 2. Inside Stuff: How Professionals Do It 3. Form and Function 4. Changing Goods 5. Venues and Middlemen 6. Place in Product 7. Corporate Organization and the Design Big Thing 8. Moral Rules: New for Old
Harvey Molotch
"Successful products must fit into the whole panoply of life and
society. The whole story can only be told by someone with a grand
view of things, who sees both the trees of design and manufacturing
and the forest of the social and political forces upon all of us.
Three cheers for Harvey Molotch-this is a great book."
-Donald A. Norman, author of "The Design of Everyday Things
"With great originality, Molotch has created a sociology of
objects, seen as the product of the joint work of many people,
especially designers. With this in hand, he brings new perspectives
to old debates about consumerism and creativity."
-Howard S. Becker, author of "Art Worlds
"This is an engaging and enjoyable book about the design of
everyday things. Harvey Molotch tells us what design is, who
designers are, where design happens, and how society, culture,
geography, the marketplace, and just about everything else
imaginable all contribute to making things look and work the way
they do."
-Henry Petroski, author of "The Pencil and "The Evolution of Useful
Things
"Human beings like stuff. We like to make, steal, hoard, and
especially use things. How these goods come to be, how they are
designed, manufactured, distributed, and especially used to make
meaning is the central concern of industrial society. "Where Stuff
Comes From is a superb introduction to exactly how this process
works...or doesn't. It's MUST reading for anyone interested in the
power of the manufactured world."
-James B. Twitchell, author of "Living It Up: Why We Love
"Superb, a witty and verbally pyrotechnical book. "Where Stuff
Comes From is deeply subversive and revolutionizes our thinking
aboutconsumerism."
-Jules Lubbock, author of "The Tyranny of Taste
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