Observing the dot-com boom and bust was like watching time-lapse photography; it seemed unreal, unsettling, yet deeply compelling. How can we try to understand the cultural changes wreaked by the last "new economy" of the 20th century? Oxford scholar Christine A. Finn spent 2000 in San Jose and its surrounding valley, exploring the personal and material culture of the area. Her outsider's report, Artifacts: An Archaeologist's Year in Silicon Valley, is a great start for students of the accelerating rate of social change.
Though she's no techie herself, she has an uncanny knack for meeting the right people at the right time to get the information she needs to drive her story onward. Talking with successes and failures, pre-IPO orchard workers turned uncertain service industry workers, and unashamed old-tech geeks, she finds a wealth of passion and confusion as social upheaval threatens to make the area's daily earthquakes nothing more than a convenient bundle of metaphors.
Finn is blessed with the ability and willingness to admit her own bafflement--when the goings-on get too weird for her to explain, she just shrugs her shoulders and moves on, leaving explanations to later theorists. Written just as the bust was recognized as more than a temporary setback, Artifacts could have been an epitaph or a morality play; instead, Finn guides the reader to a broader understanding of human motivation and behavior amidst trying times. --Rob Lightner
From Booklist
Finn, a British journalist and archaeologist with no background in technology, provides fresh insights on the impact of high technology on American culture. She interviewed a cross section of citizens of Silicon Valley from twentysomething e-commerce executives to bus drivers and farmworkers. Finn takes an archaeologist's view of the valley, its artifacts, trading areas (spas, salons, and shops), art and architecture, and habitats. She views the geographic landscape of an area prone to earthquakes as another sign that the region is "in a constant state of flux." Among her interview subjects are collectors of outdated technology who have computers with old software programs that have been resurrected, "like the Rosetta Stone being deciphered." The modern culture of Silicon Valley is driven by technology and change at a rate so rapid that local historians are now desperate to record the past and present before they are lost. Techies and technophobes alike will enjoy this book. Vanessa Bush
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