Every American an Innovator: How Innovation Became a Way of Life
暫譯: 每位美國人都是創新者:創新如何成為生活方式

Wisnioski, Matthew

  • 出版商: MIT
  • 出版日期: 2025-05-13
  • 售價: $1,980
  • 貴賓價: 9.5$1,881
  • 語言: 英文
  • 頁數: 330
  • 裝訂: Quality Paper - also called trade paper
  • ISBN: 0262550733
  • ISBN-13: 9780262550734
  • 海外代購書籍(需單獨結帳)

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商品描述

A landmark cultural history that reveals how the relentless pursuit of innovation has transformed our society, our institutions, and our inner selves.

For half a century, innovation served as a universal good in an age of fracture. That consensus is cracking. While the imperative to innovate for a better future continues to fuel systemic change around the world, critics now assail innovation culture as an engine of inequality or accuse its do-gooders of woke groupthink. What happened? Drawing on a decade of research, Every American an Innovator by Matthew Wisnioski investigates how a once obscure academic term became ingrained in our institutions, our education, and our beliefs about ourselves.

Wisnioski argues that innovation culture did not spring from the digital revolution, nor can it be boiled down to heroic entrepreneurs or villainous capitalists. Instead, he reveals the central role of a new class of experts in spreading toolkits and mindsets from the cornfields of 1940s Iowa to Silicon Valley tech giants today. This group of engineers, philosophers, bureaucrats, and business leaders posited that "innovators" were society's most important change agents and remade the nation in their image. The innovation culture they built transcended partisan divisions and made strange bedfellows. Wisnioski shows how Kennedy-era policymakers inspired President Nixon's dream of a Nobel Prize for innovators; how anti-military professors built the first university incubators for entrepreneurs; how radical feminists became millionaire consultants; how demands for a rust belt manufacturing renaissance inspired theories of a global creative class; how programs that encouraged girls and minority children to pursue innovative lives changed the nature of childhood play; and why the innovation consensus is now in dispute.

商品描述(中文翻譯)

一部具有里程碑意義的文化歷史,揭示了不斷追求創新的過程如何改變了我們的社會、機構和內心世界。

在過去的半個世紀中,創新被視為一種普世的善良,尤其在這個分裂的時代。然而,這種共識正在崩潰。儘管為了更美好的未來而創新的迫切需求仍然推動著全球的系統性變革,但批評者現在卻將創新文化視為不平等的引擎,或指責其倡導者陷入了覺醒的集體思維。究竟發生了什麼?馬修·維斯尼奧斯基(Matthew Wisnioski)在其著作《每位美國人都是創新者》(Every American an Innovator)中,基於十年的研究,探討了這個曾經鮮為人知的學術術語如何深入我們的機構、教育和對自我的信念中。

維斯尼奧斯基主張,創新文化並非源於數位革命,也不能簡化為英雄式的企業家或惡棍資本家。相反,他揭示了一個新興專家階層在推廣工具包和思維模式方面的核心角色,這些思維模式從1940年代愛荷華州的玉米田延伸至今日的矽谷科技巨頭。這群工程師、哲學家、官僚和商業領袖認為,「創新者」是社會中最重要的變革推動者,並以他們的形象重塑了國家。他們所建立的創新文化超越了黨派分歧,並使不同的利益團體結成奇特的聯盟。維斯尼奧斯基展示了甘迺迪時代的政策制定者如何啟發尼克森總統對創新者諾貝爾獎的夢想;反軍事的教授們如何為企業家建立第一個大學孵化器;激進女權主義者如何成為百萬富翁顧問;對於鋼鐵帶製造業復興的需求如何激發全球創意階層的理論;鼓勵女孩和少數族裔兒童追求創新生活的計劃如何改變了童年遊戲的性質;以及為何創新共識如今正受到質疑。

作者簡介

Matthew Wisnioski is Associate Professor of Science, Technology, and Society at Virginia Tech. He is the author of Engineers for Change: Competing Visions of Technology in 1960s America and coeditor of Does America Need More Innovators? (both MIT Press).

作者簡介(中文翻譯)

馬修·威斯尼奧斯基(Matthew Wisnioski)是維吉尼亞理工大學(Virginia Tech)科學、技術與社會的副教授。他是《改變的工程師:1960年代美國技術的競爭願景》(Engineers for Change: Competing Visions of Technology in 1960s America)的作者,以及《美國需要更多創新者嗎?》(Does America Need More Innovators?)的共同編輯(均由麻省理工學院出版社出版)。