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Programmers and Managers

The Routinization of Computer Programming in the United States

  • Book
  • © 1977

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Part of the book series: Heidelberg Science Library (HSL)

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Table of contents (7 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

Norbert Wiener, perhaps better than anyone else, understood the intimate and delicate relationship between control and communication: that messages intended as commands do not necessarily differ from those intended simply as facts. Wiener noted the paradox when the modem computer was hardly more than a laboratory curiosity. Thirty years later, the same paradox is at the heart of a severe identity crisis which con­ fronts computer programmers. Are they primarily members of "management" acting as foremen, whose task it is to ensure that orders emanating from executive suites are faithfully trans­ lated into comprehensible messages? Or are they perhaps sim­ ply engineers preoccupied with the technical difficulties of relating "software" to "hardware" and vice versa? Are they aware, furthermore, of the degree to which their work­ whether as manager or engineer-routinizes the work of others and thereby helps shape the structure of social class relation­ ships? I doubt that many of us who lived through the first heady and frantic years of software development-at places like the RAND and System Development Corporations-ever took time to think about such questions. The science fiction-like setting of mysterious machines, blinking lights, and torrents of numbers served to awe outsiders who could only marvel at the complexity of it all. We were insiders who constituted a secret society into which only initiates were welcome. So today I marvel at the boundless audacity of a rank out­ sider in writing a book like Programmers and Managers.

Authors and Affiliations

  • Department of Sociology, State University of New York at Binghamton, Binghamton, USA

    Philip Kraft

Bibliographic Information

  • Book Title: Programmers and Managers

  • Book Subtitle: The Routinization of Computer Programming in the United States

  • Authors: Philip Kraft

  • Series Title: Heidelberg Science Library

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-9420-4

  • Publisher: Springer New York, NY

  • eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive

  • Copyright Information: Springer-Verlag, New York Inc. 1977

  • Softcover ISBN: 978-0-387-90248-7Published: 18 July 1977

  • eBook ISBN: 978-1-4613-9420-4Published: 06 December 2012

  • Series ISSN: 0073-1595

  • Edition Number: 1

  • Number of Pages: 118

  • Topics: The Computing Profession, The Computer Industry, Computing Milieux

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