Tese
É possível uma esteira não taylorista? Sobre a forma social da tecnologia - o projeto de uma esteira de triagem de materiais recicláveis
Fecha
2023-03-17Autor
Cinthia Versiani Scott Varella
Institución
Resumen
Everything that is created within capitalist social relations seems to be marked
with the seal of capital's domination over work, including technologies. The challenge
for engineers, architects and designers engaged in building alternatives to this mode
of production is to intervene in technical design processes without reproducing the
domination of men and nature. There is a long debate about the nature of capitalist
technology, in the search to point out different ways to build a suitable material base
for an emancipated society and cooperative production practices. In current debates
on the perspective of “social technology”, the critique of technology as a form of
domination occupies a central place among these authors, who reject the neutrality of
technology, a classic view that is predominant among specialists. To contribute to this
debate, we analysed the case of a waste pickers’ cooperative, from Belo Horizonte,
which inserted a conveyor belt in its sorting process. The power of gears to impose
the cadence and intensify the work rhythm was the way in which the appropriation of
this instrument was historically observed from the advent of Taylorism. Doesn't it seem
counterintuitive to adopt this device in a cooperative system that aims at the
emancipation of workers? But wouldn’t Ford's principle (1925), that "no worker needs
to carry or lift anything", since "this is part of a distinct service - the transportation
service", which boosted the consolidation of the assembly line, be interesting to
organize a productive system that aims to emancipate workers, or at least alleviate
their daily toil, by facilitating work and eliminating physically degrading tasks? So what
would differentiate a conveyor from a “mechanical whip”? Would a non-Taylorist
conveyor belt be possible? This is the central question of this thesis.