technology cycle four library bibliography installation through deployment periods

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technology cycle four library bibliography installation through deployment periods

Deployment Period

Abramovitz, M. (1986). Catching up, forging ahead, and falling behind. Journal of Economic History, 46(2), 385-406.

Adams, S. (1983). *Roche versus Adams: The strange story of the antibiotic wonder drugs*. Walker.

Aitken, H. G. J. (1985). *The continuous wave: Technology and American radio, 1900-1932*. Princeton University Press.

Allen, T. J., & Scott Morton, M. S. (Eds.). (1994). *Information technology and the corporation of the 1990s: Research studies*. Oxford University Press.

Arndt, H. W. (1987). *Economic development: The history of an idea*. University of Chicago Press.

Baran, P. A., & Sweezy, P. M. (1966). *Monopoly capital: An essay on the American economic and social order*. Monthly Review Press.

Bell, D. (1973). *The coming of post-industrial society: A venture in social forecasting*. Basic Books.

Bernstein, I. (1970). *Turbulent years: A history of the American worker, 1933-1941*. Houghton Mifflin.

Bernstein, M. A. (2001). *A perilous progress: Economists and public purpose in twentieth-century America*. Princeton University Press.

Bijker, W. E., Hughes, T. P., & Pinch, T. J. (Eds.). (1987). *The social construction of technological systems: New directions in the sociology and history of technology*. MIT Press.

Bilstein, R. E. (1996). *The American aerospace industry: From workshop to global enterprise*. Twayne Publishers.

Bluestone, B., & Harrison, B. (1982). *The deindustrialization of America: Plant closings, community abandonment, and the dismantling of basic industry*. Basic Books.

Bowden, S., & Offer, A. (1994). Household appliances and the use of time: The United States and Britain since the 1920s. Economic History Review, 47(4), 725-748.

Boyer, P. (1985). *By the bomb’s early light: American thought and culture at the dawn of the atomic age*. Pantheon.

Brinkley, A. (1995). *The end of reform: New Deal liberalism in recession and war*. Alfred A. Knopf.

Brooks, J. (1987). *Showing off in America: From conspicuous consumption to parody display*. Little, Brown.

Burrows, W. E. (1998). *This new ocean: The story of the first space age*. Random House.

Calder, N. (1969). *The environment game*. Secker & Warburg.

Campbell-Kelly, M., & Aspray, W. (1996). *Computer: A history of the information machine*. Basic Books.

Carson, R. (1962). *Silent spring*. Houghton Mifflin.

Castells, M. (1996). *The rise of the network society*. Blackwell Publishers.

Ceruzzi, P. E. (1998). *A history of modern computing*. MIT Press.

Chandler, A. D. (1977). *The visible hand: The managerial revolution in American business*. Harvard University Press.

Chandler, A. D. (1990). *Scale and scope: The dynamics of industrial capitalism*. Harvard University Press.

Cohen, L. (2003). *A consumers’ republic: The politics of mass consumption in postwar America*. Knopf.

Collins, R. M. (2000). *More: The politics of economic growth in postwar America*. Oxford University Press.

Cowan, R. S. (1983). *More work for mother: The ironies of household technology from the open hearth to the microwave*. Basic Books.

Cronon, W. (1991). *Nature’s metropolis: Chicago and the Great West*. W\.W. Norton.

David, P. A. (1990). The dynamo and the computer: An historical perspective on the modern productivity paradox. The American Economic Review, 80(2), 355-361.

Davis, M. (1986). *Prisoners of the American dream: Politics and economy in the history of the US working class*. Verso.

Dobbin, F. (1994). *Forging industrial policy: The United States, Britain, and France in the railway age*. Cambridge University Press.

Drucker, P. F. (1969). *The age of discontinuity: Guidelines to our changing society*. Harper & Row.

Edwards, P. N. (1996). *The closed world: Computers and the politics of discourse in Cold War America*. MIT Press.

Ekirch, A. A. (1969). *Ideologies and utopias: The impact of the new deal on American thought*. Quadrangle Books.

Engerman, S. L., & Gallman, R. E. (Eds.). (2000). *The Cambridge economic history of the United States, Volume III: The twentieth century*. Cambridge University Press.

Espeland, W. N. (1998). *The struggle for water: Politics, rationality, and identity in the American Southwest*. University of Chicago Press.

Etzkowitz, H. (2002). *MIT and the rise of entrepreneurial science*. Routledge.

Flamm, K. (1988). *Creating the computer: Government, industry, and high technology*. Brookings Institution.

Florida, R., & Kenney, M. (1990). *The breakthrough illusion: Corporate America’s failure to move from innovation to mass production*. Basic Books.

Freeman, J. B. (2018). *Behemoth: A history of the factory and the making of the modern world*. W\.W. Norton & Company.

Friedel, R., & Israel, P. (1986). *Edison’s electric light: The art of invention*. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Fukuyama, F. (1999). *The great disruption: Human nature and the reconstitution of social order*. Free Press.

Galambos, L. (2000). The U.S. corporate economy in the twentieth century. In S. L. Engerman & R. E. Gallman (Eds.), *The Cambridge economic history of the United States* (Vol. 3, pp. 927-967). Cambridge University Press.

Galbraith, J. K. (1958). *The affluent society*. Houghton Mifflin.

Giedion, S. (1948). *Mechanization takes command: A contribution to anonymous history*. Oxford University Press.

Gordon, R. J. (2016). *The rise and fall of American growth: The U.S. standard of living since the Civil War*. Princeton University Press.

Graham, O. L. (1992). *Losing time: The industrial policy debate*. Harvard University Press.

Greenberg, D. S. (1967). *The politics of pure science*. New American Library.

Hacker, B. C. (1994). *Elements of controversy: The Atomic Energy Commission and radiation safety in nuclear weapons testing, 1947-1974*. University of California Press.

Halberstam, D. (1986). *The reckoning*. William Morrow.

Halberstam, D. (1993). *The fifties*. Villard Books.

Hall, P. (1998). *Cities in civilization*. Pantheon Books.

Hammer, M., & Champy, J. (1993). *Reengineering the corporation: A manifesto for business revolution*. Harper Business.

Harrison, B. (1994). *Lean and mean: The changing landscape of corporate power in the age of flexibility*. Basic Books.

Harvey, D. (1989). *The condition of postmodernity: An enquiry into the origins of cultural change*. Blackwell.

Hays, S. P. (1987). *Beauty, health, and permanence: Environmental politics in the United States, 1955-1985*. Cambridge University Press.

Heilbroner, R. L. (1994). *21st century capitalism*. W\.W. Norton.

Hindle, B., & Lubar, S. (1986). *Engines of change: The American industrial revolution, 1790-1860*. Smithsonian Institution Press.

Hirsh, R. F. (1989). *Technology and transformation in the American electric utility industry*. Cambridge University Press.

Hogan, M. J. (1987). *The Marshall Plan: America, Britain, and the reconstruction of Western Europe, 1947-1952*. Cambridge University Press.

Hughes, T. P. (1983). *Networks of power: Electrification in Western society, 1880-1930*. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Hughes, T. P. (1989). *American genesis: A century of invention and technological enthusiasm, 1870-1970*. Viking.

Jackson, K. T. (1985). *Crabgrass frontier: The suburbanization of the United States*. Oxford University Press.

Jacobs, J. (1961). *The death and life of great American cities*. Random House.

Jacoby, S. M. (1997). *Modern manors: Welfare capitalism since the New Deal*. Princeton University Press.

Jardini, D. R. (2000). Out of the blue yonder: The RAND Corporation’s diversification into social welfare research, 1946-1968. Doctoral dissertation, Carnegie Mellon University.

Jones, L. (1980). *Great expectations: America and the baby boom generation*. Coward, McCann & Geoghegan.

Kahneman, D., & Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect theory: An analysis of decision under risk. Econometrica, 47(2), 263-291.

Keynes, J. M. (1936). *The general theory of employment, interest, and money*. Macmillan.

Kleinman, D. L. (1995). *Politics on the endless frontier: Postwar research policy in the United States*. Duke University Press.

Kline, R., & Pinch, T. (1996). Users as agents of technological change: The social construction of the automobile in the rural United States. Technology and Culture, 37(4), 763-795.

Krugman, P. (1991). *Geography and trade*. MIT Press.

Kuznets, S. (1971). *Economic growth of nations: Total output and production structure*. Harvard University Press.

Lasch, C. (1991). *The true and only heaven: Progress and its critics*. W\.W. Norton.

Lécuyer, C. (2006). *Making Silicon Valley: Innovation and the growth of high tech, 1930-1970*. MIT Press.

Leslie, S. W. (1993). *The Cold War and American science: The military-industrial-academic complex at MIT and Stanford*. Columbia University Press.

Leuchtenburg, W. E. (1963). *Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940*. Harper & Row.

Levy, F., & Murnane, R. J. (2004). *The new division of labor: How computers are creating the next job market*. Princeton University Press.

Lewis, T. (1997). *Divided highways: Building the interstate highways, transforming American life*. Viking.

Lichtenstein, N. (1995). *The most dangerous man in Detroit: Walter Reuther and the fate of American labor*. Basic Books.

Lowen, R. S. (1997). *Creating the Cold War university: The transformation of Stanford*. University of California Press.

MacKenzie, D. (1990). *Inventing accuracy: A historical sociology of nuclear missile guidance*. MIT Press.

Maddison, A. (1995). *Monitoring the world economy, 1820-1992*. Development Centre of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Marglin, S. A., & Schor, J. B. (Eds.). (1990). *The golden age of capitalism: Reinterpreting the postwar experience*. Clarendon Press.

Marx, L. (1964). *The machine in the garden: Technology and the pastoral ideal in America*. Oxford University Press.

May, E. T. (1988). *Homeward bound: American families in the Cold War era*. Basic Books.

McCraw, T. K. (1984). *Prophets of regulation: Charles Francis Adams, Louis D. Brandeis, James M. Landis, Alfred E. Kahn*. Harvard University Press.

McCraw, T. K. (Ed.). (1997). *Creating modern capitalism: How entrepreneurs, companies, and countries triumphed in three industrial revolutions*. Harvard University Press.

McDougall, W. A. (1985). *The heavens and the earth: A political history of the space age*. Basic Books.

McNeill, J. R. (2000). *Something new under the sun: An environmental history of the twentieth-century world*. W\.W. Norton.

Melosi, M. V. (2000). *The sanitary city: Urban infrastructure in America from colonial times to the present*. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Mumford, L. (1934). *Technics and civilization*. Harcourt, Brace and Company.

Myrskylä, M., Kohler, H., & Billari, F. (2009). Advances in development reverse fertility declines. Nature, 460(7256), 741-743.

Nelson, D. (1975). *Managers and workers: Origins of the new factory system in the United States, 1880-1920*. University of Wisconsin Press.

Nelson, R. R., & Winter, S. G. (1982). *An evolutionary theory of economic change*. Harvard University Press.

Noble, D. F. (1977). *America by design: Science, technology, and the rise of corporate capitalism*. Knopf.

Noble, D. F. (1984). *Forces of production: A social history of industrial automation*. Knopf.

Norberg, A. L., & O’Neill, J. E. (1996). *Transforming computer technology: Information processing for the Pentagon, 1962-1986*. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Nye, D. E. (1990). *Electrifying America: Social meanings of a new technology, 1880-1940*. MIT Press.

O’Mara, M. P. (2005). *Cities of knowledge: Cold War science and the search for the next Silicon Valley*. Princeton University Press.

Patterson, J. T. (1996). *Grand expectations: The United States, 1945-1974*. Oxford University Press.

Pells, R. H. (1985). *The liberal mind in a conservative age: American intellectuals in the 1940s and 1950s*. Harper & Row.

Piore, M. J., & Sabel, C. F. (1984). *The second industrial divide: Possibilities for prosperity*. Basic Books.

Polenberg, R. (1972). *War and society: The United States, 1941-1945*. Lippincott.

Porter, M. E. (1990). *The competitive advantage of nations*. Free Press.

Reich, L. S. (1985). *The making of American industrial research: Science and business at GE and Bell, 1876-1926*. Cambridge University Press.

Reich, R. B. (1991). *The work of nations: Preparing ourselves for 21st century capitalism*. A.A. Knopf.

Rome, A. (2001). *The bulldozer in the countryside: Suburban sprawl and the rise of American environmentalism*. Cambridge University Press.

Rosenberg, N. (1982). *Inside the black box: Technology and economics*. Cambridge University Press.

Rothschild, E. (1973). *Paradise lost: The decline of the auto-industrial age*. Random House.

Schurr, S. H., & Netschert, B. C. (1960). *Energy in the American economy, 1850-1975: An economic study of its history and prospects*. Johns Hopkins Press.

Scranton, P. (1997). *Endless novelty: Specialty production and American industrialization, 1865-1925*. Princeton University Press.

Segal, H. P. (1985). *Technological utopianism in American culture*. University of Chicago Press.

Serrin, W. (1992). *Homestead: The glory and tragedy of an American steel town*. Times Books.

Smith, M. R., & Marx, L. (Eds.). (1994). *Does technology drive history?: The dilemma of technological determinism*. MIT Press.

Staudenmaier, J. M. (1985). *Technology’s storytellers: Reweaving the human fabric*. MIT Press.

Stein, J. (Ed.). (1997). *The American century*. Pimlico.

Strasser, S. (1989). *Satisfaction guaranteed: The making of the American mass market*. Pantheon Books.

Suzuki, D. T., & Dressel, H. (1999). *From naked ape to superspecies: A personal perspective on humanity and the global eco-crisis*. Stoddart.

Temin, P. (1964). *Iron and steel in nineteenth-century America: An economic inquiry*. MIT Press.

Usselman, S. W. (2002). *Regulating railroad innovation: Business, technology, and politics in America, 1840-1920*. Cambridge University Press.

Vatter, H. G. (1985). *The U.S. economy in World War II*. Columbia University Press.

Veblen, T. (1899). *The theory of the leisure class: An economic study of institutions*. Macmillan.

Von Hippel, E. (1988). *The sources of innovation*. Oxford University Press.

Walton, J. (1992). *Western times and water wars: State, culture, and rebellion in California*. University of California Press.

Winner, L. (1986). *The whale and the reactor: A search for limits in an age of high technology*. University of Chicago Press.

Winner, L. (1989). *The whale and the reactor: A search for limits in an age of high technology*. University of Chicago Press.

Womack, J. P., Jones, D. T., & Roos, D. (1990). *The machine that changed the world: Based on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 5-million dollar 5-year study on the future of the automobile*. Rawson Associates.

Woodbury, R. (1991). Studies in the history of machine tools. MIT Press.

Yates, J. (1989). *Control through communication: The rise of system in American management*. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Yergin, D. (1991). *The prize: The epic quest for oil, money, and power*. Simon & Schuster.

Yoffie, D. B. (Ed.). (1997). *Competing in the age of digital convergence*. Harvard Business School Press.

Zunz, O. (1990). *Making America corporate, 1870-1920*. University of Chicago Press.