
Shop Class as Soulcraft
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Philosopher and motorcycle repair-shop owner Crawford
extols the value of making and fixing things in this masterful paean to
what he calls manual competence, the ability to work with one's hands.
According to the author, our alienation from how our possessions are
made and how they work takes many forms: the decline of shop class, the
design of goods whose workings cannot be accessed by users (such as
recent Mercedes models built without oil dipsticks) and the general
disdain with which we regard the trades in our emerging information
economy. Unlike today's knowledge worker, whose work is often so
abstract that standards of excellence cannot exist in many fields
(consider corporate executives awarded bonuses as their companies sink
into bankruptcy), the person who works with his or her hands submits to
standards inherent in the work itself: the lights either turn on or they
don't, the toilet flushes or it doesn't, the motorcycle roars or
sputters. With wit and humor, the author deftly mixes the details of his
own experience as a tradesman and then proprietor of a motorcycle repair
shop with more philosophical considerations. (June)
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