Difference between revisions of "Historical Roots"

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When [[Ivan Illich]] wrote [[Tools for Conviviality]] in 1973, he was informed by a long tradition of criticism of industrial technology and of formulation of alternatives. Forebears extend at least as far back as [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]], and include twentieth-century figures such as [[Lewis Mumford]] and [[Jacques Ellul]].
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When [[Ivan Illich]] wrote [[Tools for Conviviality]] in 1973, he was informed by a long tradition of criticism of industrial technology and of formulation of alternatives. Forebears extend at least as far back as [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau]], and include twentieth-century figures such as [[Lewis Mumford]] and [[Jacques Ellul]]. It should also be noted that the [[Whole Earth]] and [[Appropriate Technology]] movements in fact appeared a few years before [[Ivan Illich]]'s book [[Tools for Conviviality]], and probably exerted a major influence thereon.
 
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It should also be noted that the [[Whole Earth]] and [[Appropriate Technology]] movements in fact appeared a few years before [[Ivan Illich]]'s book [[Tools for Conviviality]], and probably exerted a major influence thereon.
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For an introduction to the Historical Rools of [[Convivial Tools]], see [[Historical Roots Narrative]].
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*[[Emile Durkheim]]
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*[[Theory of Alienation]]
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*[[Henry David Thoreau]]
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*[[Frankfurt School]]
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*[[Sigfried Giedion]]
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*[[C. Wright Mills]]
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*[[Vance Packard]]
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*[[Buckminster Fuller]]
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*[[E.F. Schumacher]]
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For an introduction to the Historical Rools of [[Convivial Tools]], see the [[Historical Roots Narrative]].
  
 
[[Category:Historical Roots]]
 
[[Category:Historical Roots]]

Latest revision as of 12:48, 13 November 2007