Product development as reading and writing doings within sociotechnical practices: the reciprocity between engineers and artefacts
Journal article, 2015

This ethnographic study aims at understanding how product development of wind turbine controls unfolds as ongoing engineer-artefact reciprocity. We adopt a Deweyan constructionist and Science-Technology-Society approach to contribute to product development and sociomaterial studies by emphasising the role of reciprocity between engineers' experience and artefacts through reading and writing doings. Reading doings involve texts such as specifications, minutes, sketches and components. Writing doings create/modify the same type of texts. In one project, convergent reciprocity enabled the development. Another project's development was blocked, restarted and completed internally at the producer. Enablers included repositioning of working practices, application of various artefacts/tools, heterogeneous engineers and creation of common ground. Constraints involved lack of openness, too malleable artefacts, no common ground and radical change of the development trajectory. The engineers' learning depends on these constraints and enablers. Three types of reciprocity occur: convergent, faded away and blocked.

reciprocity

product development

reading and writing doings

Dewey

Author

John Bang Mathiasen

Aarhus University

Christian Koch

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Construction Management

Technology Analysis and Strategic Management

0953-7325 (ISSN) 1465-3990 (eISSN)

Vol. 27 5 604-620

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Civil Engineering

Areas of Advance

Building Futures (2010-2018)

DOI

10.1080/09537325.2015.1019848

More information

Latest update

2/28/2018