- TitelA tale of two mills : Socio-technological integration in Meiji Japan, 1868–1912
- Person
- VerfasserangabenDavid Wittner
- Erscheinungsjahr2022
- SeitenSeite 349 - 376
- IllustrationenIllustrationen
- Gesamtwerk
- AnmerkungenLiteraturverzeichnis: Seite 372-376 Erschienen in: Technology and culture ; Volume 63, 2022/2
Since the 1950s, historians have sought to explain industrial modernization in Meiji Japan as a model for developing countries. They typically attribute Japan's success to single factors such as accumulated knowledge or capital, visionary leadership, or technological choice. This article moves beyond mono-causality to examine technology transfer's role in industrial modernization. Tomioka Silk Filature and Osaka Cotton Spinning Mill make the case that components of industrialization were interrelated and a new socio-technological system was essential for technology transfer to affect a Kuhnian-style paradigm shift. Tomioka is an example of ad hoc industrialization, the gradual integration of transferred technologies, and creation of associated regimes leading to a new socio-technological system. In contrast, Osaka Cotton Mill embodies the creation of a new industrial paradigm for Japanese industry, demonstrating the essentiality of integrating numerous socio-technological elements such as adapted artifacts, bio-materials, accumulated knowledge, factory management, and geographic location.