Industrial Constructions

The Sources of German Industrial Power

Gary Herrigel author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Industrial Constructions cover

Herrigel challenges the Chandlerian, Gerschenkronian, and Schumpetarian approaches to Germany's economic history.

This book examines how industrial production in Germany was conditioned by social, political, and regional factors from the seventeenth century to the present. The argument focuses on small and medium sized firms, and suggests that Germany does not have a single coherent national system of industrial governance.This book is about the way in which industrial production in Germany is conditioned by social and political factors. Herrigel emphasizes regional, organizational, and policy dimensions of the development of German industry from the seventeenth century to the present. The argument is distinctive because it pays so much attention to small and medium-sized firms, and because it suggests that Germany does not have a single coherent national system of industrial governance. This social constructivist point of view presents a direct challenge to the Gerschenkronian, Schumpetarian, and Chandlerian approaches to Germany's economic history.

"No brief review can do justice to the wealth of detail and the broad range of sources with which this thesis is supported, backed as it is by footnote discussions that add 50% to the length of the book....this very important contribution will make it impossible, at least in the English language literature, to neglect in future the role of the nonautarkic industries in the economic rise of Germany....Backed, as they are in this case, by rich detail and knowledgeable insight, they make an important contribution that no one in the future will be able to ignore." Sidney Pollard, American Journal of Sociology
"...Gary Herrigel has produced an excellent history..." David Knoke, Contemporary Sociology
"...it provides a solid basis for understanding the history of technology and industrial policy in Germany." Edmund N. Todd, Technology and Culture
"...Herrigel provides a valuable overview of some recent research on Germany both past and present.... Clearly, this book should interest a wide range of economists, historians, and political scientists." Journal of Economic History
"Herrigel provides a valuable overview of some recent research on Germany both past and present. Of particular importance is the wealth of German-language research considered in this book, since that portion of the historical literature frequently escapes the attention of the Anglophone audience. Clearly, this book should interest a wide range of economists, historians and political scientists." Caroline Fohlin, The Journal Economic History
"Herrigel's analysis is at once informative....Herrigel has written a remarkably good book. He explicitly disavows any intention of presenting a general theory of German industrialization, and he does not present himself as an economist." K. Austin Kerr, H-Net Reviews

ISBN: 9780521778596

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 28mm

Weight: 720g

496 pages