Artigo Revisado por pares

The Post-Heroic Generation: American Independent Inventors, 1900–1950

2011; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 12; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1017/s146722270001065x

ISSN

1467-2235

Autores

Eric S. Hintz,

Tópico(s)

History of Science and Natural History

Resumo

By World War I, the public (and later, many historians) had come to believe that teams of anonymous scientists in corporate research and development (R&D) laboratories had displaced “heroic” individual inventors like Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell as the wellspring of innovation. However, the first half of the twentieth century was actually a long transitional period when lesser known independents like Chester Carlson (Xerox copier), Earl Tupper (Tupperware), Samuel Ruben (Duracell batteries), and Edwin Land (Polaroid camera) continued to make notable contributions to the overall context of innovation. Accordingly, my dissertation considers the changing fortunes of American independent inventors from approximately 1900 to 1950, a period of expanding corporate R&D, the Great Depression, and two world wars. Contrary to most interpretations of this period, I argue that individual, “post-heroic” inventors remained an important, though less visible, source of inventions in the early twentieth century.

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