Knowledge and professional identity in engineering: code‐switching and the metrics of progress

When nations redefine their priorities and re‐plot their directions of travel, engineers get worried about the contents of their knowledge. The cultural and historical specificity of their responses illustrates the extent to which the questions of what counts as engineering knowledge and what counts as an engineer are linked tightly together, and also suggests that both may be tied to local images of the nation. After summarizing recent historical work comparing national patterns in engineering knowledge and engineers' work, this essay outlines how a focus on professional identity may provide a way of accounting for national and transnational influences on engineers while avoiding the specter of determinism. Offering brief case studies drawn from France, the UK, Germany and the USA, the authors describe engineers as ‘responding’ to codes of meaning that live at different scales, including contrasting metrics of progress and images of private industry. The paper is concluded with a brief assessment of some further implications of the analysis of professional identity for work in engineering studies.

[1]  S. Helmreich After Culture: Reflections on the Apparition of Anthropology in Artificial Life, a Science of Simulation , 2001 .

[2]  Satish Deshpande After Culture , 1998 .

[3]  P. Whalley,et al.  The Social Production of Technical Work , 1986 .

[4]  T. Luhrmann Identity in Anthropology , 2001 .

[5]  Gregory K. Dreicer Constructing a Bridge: An Exploration of Engineering Culture, Design, and Research in Nineteenth-Century France and America , 1999 .

[6]  R. W. Staufenbiel German education in mechanical engineering, from the perspective of the RWTH Aachen , 1993 .

[7]  R. A. Buchanan,et al.  The Engineers: A History of the Engineering Profession in Britain, 1750-1914 , 1991 .

[8]  M. Foucault,et al.  The Order of Things , 2017 .

[9]  Jennifer Robertson,et al.  Crafting Selves: Power, Gender, and Discourses of Identity in a Japanese Workplace , 1990 .

[10]  Trinh T. Minh-ha,et al.  Out There : Marginalization and Contemporary Cultures , 1990 .

[11]  Jean-Louis Barsoux Leaders for every occasion (French engineering education) , 1989 .

[12]  C. W. R. Gispen German Engineers and American Social Theory: Historical Perspectives on Professionalization , 1988, Comparative Studies in Society and History.

[13]  Frederick Ferré,et al.  Introduction to positive philosophy , 1970 .

[14]  David A. Moss,et al.  The American System , 2004 .

[15]  Kenneth L. Alder,et al.  Engineering the Revolution: Arms and Enlightenment in France, 1763-1815 , 1998 .

[16]  T. Gieryn Cultural Boundaries of Science: Credibility on the Line , 1999 .

[17]  A. Jordan Engineers and Professional Self-Regulation: From the Finniston Committee to the Engineering Council , 1992 .

[18]  Ian Glover,et al.  Engineers in Britain: A Sociological Study of the Engineering Dimension , 1987 .

[19]  R. Taurit German engineering education from a Fachhochschule perspective , 1993 .

[20]  R. Morrison Mind, Self and Society from the Standpoint of a Social Behaviorist , 1936 .

[21]  A. Normanton A nation of steel: the making of modern America 1865–1925 , 1996 .

[22]  Mikael Andreas Hard,et al.  The Grammar of Technology: German and French Diesel Engineering, 1920-1940 , 1999 .

[23]  Eda Kranakis Constructing a bridge , 1996 .

[24]  Rudi Volti,et al.  Technical Workers in an Advanced Society: The Work, Careers and Politics of French Engineers , 1989 .

[25]  A. Tsing In the Realm of the Diamond Queen: Marginality in an Out-of-the-Way Place , 1995 .

[26]  Bruce E. Seely,et al.  The Other Re‐engineering of Engineering Education, 1900–1965 , 1999 .

[27]  A. Grenville Reactionary Modernism: Technology, Culture, and Politics in Weimar and the Third Reich , 1988 .

[28]  Peter Lundgreen Engineering education in Europe and the U.S.A., 1750–1930: The rise to dominance of school culture and the engineering professions , 1990 .

[29]  Janis Langins,et al.  Education for the Industrial World: The Ecoles d'Arts et Metiers and the Rise of French Industrial Engineering , 1987 .

[30]  Suzanne Kennedy Engineering education in Germany , 1996 .

[31]  R. Curtis The Saturated Self: Dilemmas of Identity in Contemporary Life , 1992 .

[32]  Peter Meiksins,et al.  Engineering Labour: Technical Workers in Comparative Perspective , 1996 .

[33]  D. Holland Identity and Agency in Cultural Worlds , 1998 .

[34]  Sir Montague Finniston,et al.  Engineering our future : report of the Committee of Inquiry into the Engineering Profession , 1980 .

[35]  Edwin T. Layton,et al.  A Nation of Steel: The Making of Modern America , 1996 .

[36]  R. Collins The Sociology of Philosophies , 2000 .

[37]  Standish Meacham English Culture and the Decline of the Industrial Spirit, 1850–1980. By Martin J. Wiener. (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981. xi + 217 pp. $15.95) , 1982 .

[38]  L. Dumont Homo Hierarchicus: The Caste System and Its Implications , 1966 .

[39]  A. Picon French Architects and Engineers in the Age of Enlightenment , 1992 .

[40]  J. Weiss The Making of Technological Man: The Social Origins of French Engineering Education , 1982 .

[41]  R. Fox,et al.  The Organization of Science and Technology in France, 1808-1914 , 1982 .

[42]  N. Mclaughlin The sociology of philosophies: A global theory of intellectual change , 2000 .

[43]  John K. Brown,et al.  Design Plans, Working Drawings, National Styles: Engineering Practice in Great Britain and the United States, 1775-1945 , 2000 .

[44]  David A. Hounshell,et al.  From the American System to Mass Production 1800–1932: The Development of Manufacturing Technology in the United States by David A. Hounshell (review) , 2023 .

[45]  Karl-Heinz Manegold TECHNOLOGY ACADEMISED Education and Training of the Engineer in the Nineteenth Century , 1978 .

[46]  Chrissie Smith,et al.  Technical Workers: Class, Labourism and Trade Unionism , 1987 .

[47]  Yolanda Rivera-Castillo,et al.  Growing up bilingual: Puerto Rican children in New York By Ana Celia Zentella (review) , 1997 .

[48]  K. Hernaut European Engineers: Unity of Diversity , 1994 .

[49]  K. Hernaut,et al.  The globalization of European engineering education: an American observer's perspective , 2001, 31st Annual Frontiers in Education Conference. Impact on Engineering and Science Education. Conference Proceedings (Cat. No.01CH37193).