

What does it mean to be called an industrial designer? This book traces the remarkable rise of this professional identity in historical perspective from a position of anonymity in the early twentieth century, to mid-century professionalisation, to decline and disintegration by 1980.
Drawing on new, extensive, original archival research, it uncovers the history of a profession in a state of re-invention, 1930-1980 in Britain and the United States. The book tests assumptions about the relationship between the professions in the two countries, bringing them into comparative historical perspective for the first time. The gendered dynamics of professionalisation and their interaction with the representation of the heroic male designer are interrogated and critically examined. Building on new gender perspectives to the history of the industrial design profession, the book calls for a re-examination of the limits and boundaries of what constitutes professional identity and work.
- Price: $130.00
- Pages: 240
- Carton Quantity: 20
- Publisher: Manchester University Press
- Imprint: Manchester University Press
- Series: Studies in Design and Material Culture
- Publication Date: 5th November 2024
- Illustration Note: 8 colour illustrations, 22 black and white illustrations, and 1 table
- ISBN: 9781526141033
- Format: Hardcover
- BISACs:
DESIGN / History & Criticism
DESIGN / Graphic Arts / General
DESIGN / Industrial
Introduction
1 A new profession
2 The (general) consultant designer
3 Women’s work
4 Professional codes
5 Crisis of professionalism
6 Social responsibility and the industrial designer
Epilogue
Index
What does it mean to be called an industrial designer? This book traces the remarkable rise of this professional identity in historical perspective from a position of anonymity in the early twentieth century, to mid-century professionalisation, to decline and disintegration by 1980.
Drawing on new, extensive, original archival research, it uncovers the history of a profession in a state of re-invention, 1930-1980 in Britain and the United States. The book tests assumptions about the relationship between the professions in the two countries, bringing them into comparative historical perspective for the first time. The gendered dynamics of professionalisation and their interaction with the representation of the heroic male designer are interrogated and critically examined. Building on new gender perspectives to the history of the industrial design profession, the book calls for a re-examination of the limits and boundaries of what constitutes professional identity and work.
- Price: $130.00
- Pages: 240
- Carton Quantity: 20
- Publisher: Manchester University Press
- Imprint: Manchester University Press
- Series: Studies in Design and Material Culture
- Publication Date: 5th November 2024
- Illustrations Note: 8 colour illustrations, 22 black and white illustrations, and 1 table
- ISBN: 9781526141033
- Format: Hardcover
- BISACs:
DESIGN / History & Criticism
DESIGN / Graphic Arts / General
DESIGN / Industrial
Introduction
1 A new profession
2 The (general) consultant designer
3 Women’s work
4 Professional codes
5 Crisis of professionalism
6 Social responsibility and the industrial designer
Epilogue
Index