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Cultures@SiliconValley [Hardcover]

J. English-Lueck (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Price: $55.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

March 27, 2002
After Santa Clara county in California was labeled “Silicon Valley” in the 1970s, it attained a mythical quality in the public imagination. Although much of the myth is surely hyperbole, the region has experienced and continues to experience forces that will shape the future elsewhere in the United States and around the world. The paramount producer of the information revolution, Silicon Valley has become the icon for a lifestyle saturated with digital devices.

Whereas most books on the region focus on its entrepreneurial reputation, this book is an anthropological expedition into the everyday lives of people living in and connected to Silicon Valley—software engineers around the water cooler, a mothers’ group at lunch, nannies in the park, rush-hour commuters—to get at the emerging texture of life. A specialized high-tech economy has drawn people from many countries, and the things that make Silicon Valley culture distinctive—technological saturation and cultural complexity—also define an emerging global culture, and in that context it operates as a natural experimental laboratory.

Based on ten years of anthropological research, the book is an ethnographic exploration of the impact of these momentous changes on a single region. Within schools, workplaces, and homes identities emerge, erode, transform, and are recreated to coalesce into a larger community of communities, producing many different choices for its inhabitants. These choices determine how technology is used, work is done, and families are made. People juggle these choices, often informed by the same pragmatic, instrumental reasoning that characterizes high-tech workplaces. Saturated by information technology and struggling to manifest civic life from deeply diverse identity communities, the inhabitants of Silicon Valley illustrate in microcosm the social and cultural identities of the future.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“English-Lueck’s fascinating new book, Cultures@Silicon Valley, casts a laserlike anthropological eye on the mores and mannerisms of her homies. . . . English-Lueck and colleagues left the groves of academe and spent years—real quality time—observing “ordinary” people doing mundane things. . . . English-Lueck writes about moms at youth soccer games keeping one eye on the laptop and one on the field, dads who bond at the park by sharing their work histories, families that make a place at the dinner table for the PC, janitors who take high-tech courses to keep up with the custodial equipment innovations.”—San Francisco Chronicle


“While we read about its excesses and shortcomings in newspapers every day, rarely are the factors that distinguish Silicon Valley from the rest of America put in a broader context. In Cultures@SiliconValley, anthropologist J.A. English-Lueck explores the unique set of assumptions taken for granted by engineers and entrepreneurs alike, suggesting how apparent success in the Valley gave way to tangible failure.”—The Examiner


“The investigation English-Lueck is conducting delves deeper than the surface to-and-fro of the boom-bust business cycle. Venture capitalists, CEOs and IPOs get the headlines, but Enligh-Lueck is looking at how people actually live, how the cultural interplay of Chinese and Indian and Mexican and Anglo-American resolves itself in the high-pressure, high-stakes cauldron of the Valley, how the 24/7 nature of work in the high-tech world warps families and schools and friendships.”—Salon.com


“Good ethnographies are hard to find. This is not only a good one, but an excellent and timely one.”—CHOICE


“Even though this book is written from an academic study, English-Lueck lays off the anthropological jargon enough to present the information in a way readable to the rest of us. For my two cents, it’s definitely worth a read. . . . If you have any curiosity about what it means to live in Silicon Valley at the turn of the millenium, this book is for you.”—Ellen Young, San Jose’s Free Downtown Community Magazine

From the Inside Flap

After Santa Clara county in California was labeled “Silicon Valley” in the 1970s, it attained a mythical quality in the public imagination. Although much of the myth is surely hyperbole, the region has experienced and continues to experience forces that will shape the future elsewhere in the United States and around the world. The paramount producer of the information revolution, Silicon Valley has become the icon for a lifestyle saturated with digital devices.
Whereas most books on the region focus on its entrepreneurial reputation, this book is an anthropological expedition into the everyday lives of people living in and connected to Silicon Valley—software engineers around the water cooler, a mothers’ group at lunch, nannies in the park, rush-hour commuters—to get at the emerging texture of life. A specialized high-tech economy has drawn people from many countries, and the things that make Silicon Valley culture distinctive—technological saturation and cultural complexity—also define an emerging global culture, and in that context it operates as a natural experimental laboratory.
Based on ten years of anthropological research, the book is an ethnographic exploration of the impact of these momentous changes on a single region. Within schools, workplaces, and homes identities emerge, erode, transform, and are recreated to coalesce into a larger community of communities, producing many different choices for its inhabitants. These choices determine how technology is used, work is done, and families are made. People juggle these choices, often informed by the same pragmatic, instrumental reasoning that characterizes high-tech workplaces. Saturated by information technology and struggling to manifest civic life from deeply diverse identity communities, the inhabitants of Silicon Valley illustrate in microcosm the social and cultural identities of the future.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Stanford University Press; 1 edition (March 27, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0804744289
  • ISBN-13: 978-0804744287
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,074,365 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Dr. J.A.English Lueck is a Professor of Anthropology at San Jose State University and a Research Affiliate at the Institute for the Future. A ethnographic research junkie, she loves being in the field and writing about the human experience. She has written Health in the New Age and Chinese Intellectuals on the World Frontier. She is the author of several books on Silicon Valley including Cultures@SiliconValley, winner of the 2006 Diana Forsythe Prize for the anthropology of science and technology, Busier than Ever! Why American Families can't Slow Down (with Charles Darrah and James Freeman), and Being and Well-being: Health and the Working Bodies of Silicon Valley.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent resource in user friendly style, May 22, 2002
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B. Evans (Gilroy, California) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Cultures@SiliconValley (Paperback)
This book is an excellent resource for anyone interested in culture, Silicon Valley, and the ethnographic methodology. From the first page, the reader is drawn into the people and unique culture of a technology based community. The author simulaneously paints an accurate portrait of the South San Francisco Bay Area while intoducing us to the complex lives of individuals who live, work, and volunteer there. This book is a sharp contrast to jargon-laced papers or tedious textbooks. Information on the area and culture are wrapped around the narratives of real people and their ability to survive in an exceptionally fluid society.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A Shame to Anthropological Research, March 13, 2010
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This review is from: Cultures@SiliconValley (Paperback)
This book is a terrible addition to Anthropological research. Not only does English-Lueck rely on hundreds of undergrads for her research in Silicon Valley, This book never goes into depth in any topic that is mentioned, and midway in the book the author states that the stories are made up from compiled data, thus the people in it are not real. The book never gets into the swing and compels people to want to continue to read. The author also makes claims without backing it up with data (which there should be).

If you want to know how not to write an ethnography- this would be your book.
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