Behemoth A history of the factory and the making of the modern world

Joshua Benjamin Freeman

Book - 2018

Factories, with their ingenious machinery and miraculous productivity, are celebrated as modern wonders of the world. Yet from William Blake's "dark Satanic mills" they have also fuelled our fears of the future. Telling the story of the factory, Joshua B. Freeman takes readers from the textile mills in England that powered the Industrial Revolution to the steel and car plants of twentieth-century America, Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, to today's behemoths making trainers, toys and iPhones in China and Vietnam. He traces arguments about factories and social progress through such critics and champions as Marx, Ford and Stalin. And he explores the representation of factories in the work of Margaret Bourke-White, Char...lie Chaplin and Diego Rivera.

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Subjects
Published
New York : W. W. Norton & Company [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Joshua Benjamin Freeman (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xviii, 427 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780393246315
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. "Like Minerva from the Brain of Jupiter": The Invention of the Factory
  • Chapter 2. "The Living Light": New England Textiles and Visions of Utopia
  • Chapter 3. "The Progress of Civilization": Industrial Exhibitions, Steelmaking, and the Price of Prometheanism
  • Chapter 4. "I Worship Factories": Fordism, Labor, and the Romance of the Giant Factory
  • Chapter 5. "Communism is Soviet Power Plus the Electrification of the Whole Country": Crash Industrialization in the Soviet Union
  • Chapter 6. "Common Requirements of Industrialization": Cold War Mass Production
  • Chapter 7. "Foxconn City": Giant Factories in China and Vietnam
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Illustration Credits
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

The Industrial Revolution's giant factories, for good or ill, created modern life. Treated as architectural innovations, UK and US textile mills became tourist destinations, showcasing the structures, machinery, and workers within. Iron beams replaced wood and steam replaced water power, ending size and geographic limitations. Workers, used to their own pace and rhythm, found themselves tethered to machines and overseers who together set the tempo, creating working conditions that some compared to slavery. Corporations created supplies of capital, offsite ownership, and banking, reducing local influence. Cotton, then steel and automobiles, provided the impetus, employing thousands of workers, which led to class warfare. Henry Ford added vertical integration when his River Rouge plant employed tens of thousands of workers on assembly lines, deskilling the workplace by emphasizing the machine. The late 1930s saw the rise of the union, bringing both democracy and the American dream to blue-collar workers. Though it was a capitalist creation, the giant factory was adopted by the Soviet Union as a continuation of their revolution. Finally, the system moved to China and Vietnam, where giantism made production simpler, while in the West direct action by workers caused its demise. Summing Up: Recommended. Most levels/libraries. --Duncan R. Jamieson, Ashland University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review

BEHEMOTH: A History of the Factory and the Making of the Modern World, by Joshua B. Freeman. (Norton, $27-95-) Freeman traces two centuries of factory production around the world in ways that are accessible, cogent, occasionally riveting and entirely new. The book should be required for all Americans. A FALSE REPORT: A True Story of Rape in America, by T. Christian Miller and Ken Armstrong. (Crown, $28.) This is the story of a rape investigation - plainly and expertly told - in which the victim is bullied into recanting her story before evidence surfaces, years later, to prove she was telling the truth all along. RISE AND KILL FIRST: The Secret History of Israel's Targeted Assassinations, by Ronen Bergman. (Random House, $35.) Bergman's fast-paced account of Israel's program to assassinate its enemies raises troubling moral and practical questions but also demonstrates that the tactic can be a highly effective tool against terrorist groups. WE THE CORPORATIONS: How American Businesses Won Their Civil Rights, by Adam Winkler. (Liveright, $28.95.) A law professor recounts the history of American companies' radical efforts to shape the law, with the result, he writes, that "today corporations have nearly all the same rights as individuals." THE FRIEND, by Sigrid Nunez. (Riverhead, $25.) The narrator of Nunez's wry novel inherits a Great Dane after her friend and mentor, an aging author, commits suicide. The novel suggests that something larger than writerly passion has been lost in our culture, but itself serves as a tribute to the values it holds dear. WHAT ARE WE DOING HERE? Essays, by Marilynne Robinson. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.) The novelist's latest collection, featuring talks she gave over the past three years, elaborates an eloquent defense of America's democratic traditions and institutions, with a special focus on public universities, whose original mission, she reminds us, was to "democratize privilege." ETERNAL LIFE, by Dara Horn. (Norton, $25.95.) What are the downsides of living forever? Horn explores this idea through the story of Rachel, who has been alive for 2,000 years and is getting a little tired of it. "The hard part isn't living forever," she says. "It's making life worth living." BEAR AND WOLF, written and illustrated by Daniel Salmieri. (Enchanted Lion, $17.95; ages 4 to 8.) Gorgeous, serene and philosophical, this picture book by the illustrator of "Dragons Love Tacos" features animal friends on a winter night's walk. THE RABBIT LISTENED, written and illustrated by Cori Doerrfeld. (Dial, $17.99; ages 4 to 8.) In this wonderful picture book, little Taylor's block tower falls. Everyone who passes gives advice, but a silent rabbit offers what's really needed: an understanding ear. The full reviews of these and other recent books are on the web: nytimes.com/books

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [March 25, 2018]
Review by Booklist Review

Besides their unfortunate contribution to urban blight and toxic waste, factories have played an enormous role in shaping our consumption-driven society. As Queens College history professor Freeman observes in this absorbing, multi-layered history of these large manufacturing facilities, the vast majority of goods in our homes and workplaces, from microwave ovens to blue jeans, were made in factories. Beginning with mid-eighteenth-century silk and cotton mills that employed a few hundred people, Freeman follows the growth of factories to today's sprawling behemoths that mass-produce toys and sneakers with the labor of several hundred thousand. In addition to discussing the visions of business titans, ranging from Ford to Tesla, while tracing how manufacturing processes evolved from cotton gins to robotic assembly lines, the author turns the spotlight on the changing conditions of workers, with unionized teams mercifully supplanting child and slave labor. While Freeman underscores the invaluable benefits factories have contributed to civilization, his sobering dissection of their negative environmental impact shows how much room there is for improvement.--Hays, Carl Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Freeman (American Empire), professor of history at Queens College and the CUNY Graduate Center, recounts the development of the factory, which over the past 300 years has come to symbolize both utopian possibilities and appalling realities. He notes that "we live in a factory-made world," yet most consumers know little about these places or the experiences of those who work in them. Freeman begins in 18th-century England with the first factories, which were synonymous with filth and misery-William Blake's "dark satanic mills." He moves to 19th-century New England, where paternal industrialists hoped that they could both reap large profits and provide their employees with excellent working conditions; their idealism was soon replaced by a drive for ever-greater profits. Freeman is sharply critical of the technocrats and managers who regularly attempt to reduce wages and increase control over labor, yet he also sees the factory as a workplace that holds the possibility of liberation; Ford auto workers' successful unionizing efforts, for example, "gave mass production a new, more democratic meaning." Freeman goes on to describe modern Chinese factories, noting that some have become notorious for conditions that have caused workers to commit suicide, while others offer lavish recreational amenities that are irresistible to rural migrants. This wide-ranging book offers readers an excellent foundation for understanding how their possessions are made, as well as how the factory system affects society. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this expansive new book, Freeman (history, Queens Coll.; Working-Class New York) traces the history of factories from their advent in 18th-century England to their dissemination throughout America and the Soviet Union as 20th-century symbols of progress and modernity, and finally their migration to China and other countries in Asia. A recurring character throughout is American carmaker Henry Ford, and an integral idea to factories is that of mass production and automation. The book satisfyingly shows the undiscriminating reach of Fordism from America to Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia. Besides focusing on the rise and spread of factories, changes in factory labor, and creation and struggle of unions, Freeman also looks at the way factories permeated the culture of art, literature, movies, and politics. Present-day factories are bigger than ever but are no longer the beacons of culture, progress, and modernity they once were. Instead, factory life is shrouded in mystery and working conditions are mired in scandal. VERDICT Freeman has provided an ambitious, sweeping, and well-researched history of factories, which remains accessible and relevant to general readers.-Timothy Berge, SUNY Oswego Lib. © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Wide-ranging study of the world's factories over the last three centuries.The birthplace of the factory may have been England, as Freeman (History/Queen's Coll.; American Empire: The Rise of a Global Power, the Democratic Revolution at Home 1945-2000, 2012, etc.) writes, but the idea of concentrated labor spread quickly throughout the world, with changes befitting local conditions as it went. For example, whereas the British countryside was crowded and full of employable men, the hinterlands of New England were not, leading capitalists there to find "a brilliant solution in the recruitment of young women" who, coming and going into marriage and their family households, would be a constantly changing cast of characters and not a "permanent proletariat." With workers came management theories such as Taylorism, named for Frederick Winslow Taylor, who, of a liberal and educated Philadelphia family, defied expectations to become first a factory worker and then a consultant on factory laborand whose practices "meant a loss of autonomy and an attack on craft pride" in the eyes of many workers and activists, lending credence to Marxist ideas of labor value and alienation. As Freeman notes, industrial work has fallen off considerably in the U.S., which has led to wholesale re-evaluations of the political place of unions, the role of workers in mass progressive movements, and so forth, even as manufacturing work has remained mostly steady worldwide, with about a third of the workforce engaged in industry, most employed in factories. The author also notes that factories have life cycles just as does everything else, though these are recognized differently from place to place. In China, for instance, tinkering with the industrial mix and downsizing for efficiency would run the risk of igniting political opposition, with the result that "the Chinese government moves gingerly in its prolonged effort to shut down unneeded or inefficient state-owned factory giants."We are all implicated in the world of the giant factory, but students of economic history and geopolitics in particular will find much of value here. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.