The Digital Flood : The Diffusion of Information Technology Across the U. S. , Europe, and Asia
The Digital Flood : The Diffusion of Information Technology Across the U. S. , Europe, and Asia
Click to enlarge
Author(s): Cortada, James W.
ISBN No.: 9780199921553
Pages: 864
Year: 201209
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 186.30
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (On Demand)

"This is really an astonishing book-James W. Cortada has tracked down rare and unusual sources, reports, books, and otherwise inaccessible data to offer a stunning global history of information technology. The 333 information-packed footnotes on China and India alone make this a must-own volume."--Thomas J. Misa, Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota "James Cortada provides a convincing and challenging comparative history of computer adaption and diffusion. It is amazing what Cortada achieves by comparing the national stories of information technology diffusion. The book facilitates important new insights into the role of government and industry and provides new and refreshing perspectives on how societies change, seen through the lenses of innovation, production, and application of information processing technology."--Lars Heide, Copenhagen Business School "Information technology is the most significant innovation affecting all of us in the last 70 years.


James Cortada shows how computers spread from the US to Europe and Asia and suggests reasons for their rapid pace of diffusion. Historians and technologists will both be interested in his ideas."--Henry Lucas, University of Maryland "In The Digital Flood, James Cortada, the author of two dozen books on the history and management of information technologies, undertakes an incredibly ambitious project: to analyze the international diffusion and deployment of IT from the 1940s through the late 1990s. The project is mind-boggling not only because of its geographical scope--the book has chapters on the U.S., Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Japan, the Asian Tigers, China, and India--but also because it covers both the activities of governments and IT vendors ("diffusion") and those of users ("deployment"). Although readers may quibble about specific dimensions of the world history of IT that should have been included (or left out), in my view Cortada delivers a solid synthesis. As a comprehensive synthesis of the international history of IT diffusion through the late 1990s, Cortada''s book is unique and will clearly serve as the standard reference on the subject for years to come.


"--EH.Net "This book should prove a valuable resource for anyone interested in the international diffusions of computers and information technology over the last half century. The plethora of obscure country-specific surveys and case studies Cortada draws on in his endnotes makes the volume a treasure trove for those with a serious interest in this salient topic. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Drawing on his long career and some two-dozen previous books on computer and IT history, this looks to be [Cortada''s] magnum opus. He argues that these technologies are the glue that hold together today''s economies and are propelling increases in the quality of life of over a billion people moving into the middle class. The hefty book is designed so readers can delve into chapters of particular interest, or read the whole study. The emphasis is less on computer technology (as that is already so well covered elsewhere), and more on IT systems and applications.


Cortada will surely nail down his already superb historical reputation with this well-organized and insightful work of synthesis of a huge literature in multiple languages."--Communication Booknotes Quarterly James Cortada has produced an impressive body of work that addresses the history of computing and information technologies in the US. His most recent book, The Digital Flood, dramatically expands the focus to include not just the US story but also western and eastern Europe as well as Asian countries like India, Japan, and China. The result is a detailed global history of computing, in turns both multinational as well as transnational. The information and statistics Cortada marshals to tell his expansive story are impressive, as is the huge mass of secondary and some primary literature he has read and synthesized. For someone seeking a font of sources and references that detail the spread of IT in the US, Europe, India, Japan, and China, one could not do much better. More a broad economic and business history than a detailed social history, [This book] moves us closer to a comprehensive global understanding of the spread and adoption of computing technologies."--Technology & Culture.



To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...