1st Edition

The Sociomaterial Construction of Users 3D Printing and the Digitalization of the Prosthetics Industry

By David Seibt Copyright 2023
274 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

274 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

274 Pages 39 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book explores the intricate connections that link the current digitalization of manufacturing to our daily lives and identities as members of highly technologized societies. Based on extensive research on the prosthetics industry in Germany, the US, Canada, and Haiti, the author analyzes the sociomaterial construction of users, by demonstrating the ways in which the introduction of 3D... Read more

1. Introduction: How Do User Roles Change in Digitalizing Industries?

2. Theoretical Foundations of Industrial User Construction

3. Methods for Studying Industrial User Construction

4. Designing Technology: User Representation and Inscription

5. Distributing Technology: Mediation between Industry and Users

6. Using Technology: Between Re-Interpretation and Re-Inscription

7. Digitalization and the Future of Use

Biography

David Seibt is a post-doctoral research associate at the Institute of Sociology, Technical University of Berlin, Germany.

This is an ambitious book focusing on how an industrial field (prosthetics) constructs a new ‘user landscape’ upon digitalized production. It elaborates how new production processes shape the envisioning of users and the evolution of userships. In doing so, it gives important clues as to why some rather than other technological visions lead to realized outcomes in the midst of all the buzz and grand claims that accompany novel production technologies such as additive manufacturing.

Sampsa Hyysalo, Professor of Codesign, Aalto University 

This book is a fine piece of intellectual craftsmanship that combines three key STS topics in a highly elucidating study of 3D printing in prosthetics: The role of users in innovation, the digitalization of industrial production, and the rise of open source communities. Written in an admirable scholarly prose, The Sociomaterial Construction of Users suggests an instructive and generalizable analytics and presents an enlightening case of the manifold interactions between digitalizing industrial organizations and their users, hence: of technology in society.

Sabine Maasen, Professor of Science Studies and Innovation Research, University of Hamburg