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Project featured in Oral History Journal

Makers, Manufacturers & Designers was featured in the Oral History Journal‘s survey of international projects. Read the project summary here.

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Research Assistant required

To assist with Jesse Adams Stein’s DECRA project, Makers, Manufacturers & Designers – Connecting Histories

Applications are now closed.

Hours:

This is flexible but ideally 7 to 14 hours per week, September 2022 – September 2023, with potential for further extension.

Rate:

UTS Professional Casual HEW 5 Step 1055 (approx. $55 p/h)

Tasks:

  • Writing oral history interview summaries (careful listening & summarising with appropriate language and keywords … these are not full transcripts but concise summaries of content);
  • Support identifying potential new interviewees;
  • Symposium administrative support;
  • Other research support as required (archival / bibliographic).

Preferable capacities:

  • Familiarity with design, history, humanities and/or social sciences research;
  • Experience with events organisation;
  • Familiarity with oral history interviews (helpful but not essential);
  • Familiarity with UTS systems (helpful but not essential);
  • Some graphic design experience (helpful but not essential).

Location

UTS – this role is Sydney-based. That said, most work could be done remotely, but the RA would need to be in Sydney in June-July 2023 for the All Hands on Deck Symposium.

Please send a CV to jesse.stein@uts.edu.au

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Do we still need to make things?

I was recently interviewed by Garland Magazine about my book Industrial Craft in Australia, see the article here, and the podcast here.

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Rethinking ‘Made in Australia’

I was recently interviewed by UTS’ Jaki Middleton about my research and the Makers, Manufacturers & Designers project. The interview is reproduced below, original at this link.

What are your areas of expertise?

I’m a design researcher and oral historian and I specialise in the less recognised, or less fashionable areas of material practice and design. So, things like craft skills, trades, and workplace experiences, engagements with technology and the consequences of deindustrialisation. I look at those experiences partly through the lens of material culture, but also via detailed human stories. That is, through oral history, by uncovering personal experiences of deindustrialisation and technological change.

Can you tell me about your current research?

My Australian Research Council DECRA project ‘Makers, Manufacturers & Designers: Connecting Histories’ looks at the relationship between the design industry, local manufacturing and technical trades. Reflecting on the second half of the 20th century, I look at how that relationship changed with the process of deindustrialisation in Australia. Offshoring of manufacturing and the digitisation of design processes, for example.

One of the most interesting things is how it was not so long ago that we had generative connections between vocational education, design and local manufacturing, and you can trace this through people’s career pathways. For example, people who might have trained in technical colleges, they may have initially worked in manufacturing, but now they are contributing to Australia’s creative industries, or to design or education. So, there are these fascinating creative cross-fertilisations of practice, knowledge and skill that happen when you have a viable and dynamic onshore manufacturing sector, combined with a well-funded vocational education sector.

There are these fascinating creative cross-fertilisations of practice, knowledge and skill that happen when you have a viable and dynamic onshore manufacturing sector, combined with a well-funded vocational education sector.
Dr Jesse Adams Stein

In discussing the future of Australian manufacturing, why is it important to reflect on the past?

I think it’s important to understand at least the last 50 years in Australia in order to understand where we are now. I’m quite interested in the changes that happened in the 1980s in terms of ‘economic rationalism’ (or the rise of neoliberalism), the opening up of Australian trade internationally, and what that meant for what happened to Australia.

Now of course, we have different technologies, different power relationships, different ways of doing business, different ways of working. So, it’s not about trying to return Australia to a kind of mythical state where everything is ‘made in Australia’. But it’s about thinking about when we did have a larger manufacturing sector and a better funded vocational education sector – what was possible, what was working, and what can we learn from those past experiences that we can build into how we transform the present?

When I think about the future for Australia, if we were to coordinate industry policy, so that design, manufacturing, and skills training are really built together coherently, and these policies align with energy policy, both in terms of development of technologies and jobs, and changing over to a renewable energy grid, then there is real potential for positive developments.

casts of large scale gears
Dr Stein’s research project ‘Reshaping Australian Manufacturing’ focused on the Australian engineering pattern making trade. Photo: Dolman Pattern & Model Makers.

What excites you about the research you do?

It is a great privilege to undertake oral history interviews, I get to hear people’s life stories. And that’s incredibly interesting, no matter who you are. And there are always these wonderful connections between broader historical patterns and an individual’s life story. I’ve learned so much from just talking to ordinary Australians about what they do. People are a lot more creative than we often give them credit for.

Also, we’re now in a moment in Australian political history where it feels like real change might be possible, finally. This moment, right now in 2022 after a change in federal government – it’s a super exciting time to be contributing to discussions about reforms to national industry policy.

Who stands to benefit from your research?

Well, I hope that workers can benefit from us all having more nuanced ways of thinking about work and skill, and I hope we can become thoughtful about the role of industrial tradespeople and the knowledge that they hold. I’d like to see more respect and remuneration given to people who have technical and trade skills – from weavers to engineering patternmakers (and everything in between).

What experiences explain how you came to be a design researcher?

I’ve always been interested in design and architecture through my parents. Not that either are designers or architects, but my father originally wanted to be an architect (at high school they told him he wasn’t good at maths so ‘he’d have to do law’). When I was growing up we spent a lot of time going to museums, talking about objects and talking about the built environment. There’s a certain sense of rigour and intellectualism that both my parents have, which aligns with an academic pathway, even though that wasn’t their careers. My mother nearly did a PhD in the psychology of architecture, but she met my dad and had me instead. So maybe I’m fulfilling her aims in that regard.

How has your research evolved?

I’m very cross-disciplinary. I’m not strictly a design historian, I’ve delved into labour history, certain parts of sociology, human geography. Right now I’m very involved in contemporary questions about industry policy that puts me in another disciplinary framework. It’s always changing as the issues change, and as my interests evolve. Rather than trying to pull the material into a discipline, I follow the material.

This moment, right now in 2022 after a change in federal government – it’s a super exciting time to be contributing to discussions about reforms to national industry policy.
Dr Jesse Adams Stein

How does your research intersect with the topic of sustainability?

I co-lead an ongoing project called Repair Design (with Assoc Prof Alexandra Crosby), which looks at different ways of understanding problems of repair in an Australian context. We’re interested in questions of e-waste, mass-production and over consumption of material objects, particularly technologies, and the challenges of product repair. I’ve been involved in discussions about what kinds of legislative change or regulatory change we need to make repair a more possible thing to do, for example with appliances and small technologies, in order to slow down the disposal of materials (such as rare minerals and plastics) to the waste stream.

What’s next?

As part of my DECRA I’m also running an oral history project in association with the National Library of Australia called ‘Makers, Manufacturers and Designers’. I’m interviewing people from a range of trade, creative and technical backgrounds including textile patternmakers, mould makers, former wallpaper colourists, industrial draftspeople, arts technicians, former manufacturing workers. I have a co-interviewer Nikki Henningham, who is interviewing people in South Australia, the ACT and Victoria, and I’m interviewing people in NSW. The interviews will go into the National Library’s collection and will inform my research. Together, these people’s stories point to much larger dynamics related to that late 20th century connection between Australian design, vocational trades, manufacturing and the creative industries.

I’m also collaborating with Dr Chantel Carr, a human geographer at the University of Wollongong, to produce a cross-disciplinary symposium that will take place at UTS in July 2023. Chantel and I have similar research interests in terms of trade skills, craft and industrial work. Titled ‘All Hands on Deck’, the symposium will look at the relationship between work, skill and material production in the context of the coming social and environmental crises. It asks the question: how can we reimagine work and skills to preparing for the disasters that are potentially to come? This might mean mitigation, resilience and capacity building. The skills could be everything from practical making skills, to repairing skills, to the care economy (etc). We’re very excited to be bringing Professor Alice Twemlow to Australia for it, and will also have online keynote from Emeritus Professor Tim Ingold. The good news is that the Call for Papers is still open! It closes on 25 July 2022.

A dark cloudy background, with the words 'All Hands on Deck, a cross disciplinary symposium 19-21 July 2023' overlaid
All Hands on Deck, a cross disciplinary symposium will be held at UTS from 19-21 July 2023.

Dr Jesse Adams Stein is a Senior Lecturer in the UTS School of Design. She was awarded an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Early Career Research Fellowship (DECRA) which commenced in July 2021.

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All Hands on Deck 2023

As part of this DECRA project, I am collaborating with Dr Chantel Carr to produce a new cross-disciplinary symposium (and edited book):

All Hands on Deck:
Work, skill and material production at a time of human and environmental calamity

It will be held on 19-21 July 2023 at the Faculty of Design, Architecture & Building, University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Sydney, Australia

A cross-disciplinary collaboration

Dr Jesse Adams Stein, a design researcher, and Dr Chantel Carr, a human geographer, have worked on similar issues and topics for many years, and finally have the opportunity to collaborate. All Hands on Deck originally emerged from Stein’s Australian Research Council DECRA research project, Makers, Manufacturers & Designersbut it is enriched by Carr’s social science background and her current Australian Research Council DECRA project – Locating the Household in Post-carbon Regional Economies – on workers and families in energy-intensive sectors.

Through convening All Hands on Deck, Stein and Carr seek to connect scholars, thinkers and makers across disciplines and geographical boundaries, to address urgent questions related to the interrelationship between labour, skill and technical knowledge, within the shifting landscape of work and climate change.

Call for Papers

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Aligning manufacturing policy with ‘green economy’ policy: This goal needs more than high vis

Another short piece by Jesse Adams Stein – joining historical manufacturing research with present issues in the lead-up to the 2022 federal election in Australia

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That buzz term “Advanced Manufacturing”, what should it really mean?

Here’s a recent article (loosely based on Jesse Adams Stein’s book Industrial Craft in Australia) about how we need to rethink Australian manufacturing policy, and why it still matters: