ABSTRACT

This book analyzes the history of management, placing it in perspective with both American history and the genealogy of digital technology. Focusing on the years of industrial mobilization in the United States (from 1937 to 1945) and their extension into the Cold War, it shows particularly how "scientific management" was reconfigured and re-legitimized in favor of a new profoundly American geopolitics. In a context where the future was at a standstill, this research also explains what became of the managerial processes at the heart of capitalism from the 40s onwards: the shift from a managerial capitalism of calculation to a narrative capitalism made up of "desiring machines". This digital management no longer simply contributes, along with others, to unveiling and revealing the future. Aligned with the American obsession with novelty, it is the very process of revelation and unveiling, with managers and consumers alike becoming the intersecting subjects of desires borne of managerial apocalypses.

To explore this period of American history, the author has combined a triple narrative anchored in three types of archives: an intimate history of this reconfiguration from the presence in New York of Saint-Exupéry, Burnham and Wiener; a description of the great historical moment of industrial mobilization; and a philosophical speculation about reconfiguration and its links to American history.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Informing a Depthless World, the Great Consequence of Our Digital Management

chapter 1|13 pages

James Burnham, the Walker of Washington Square

In Search of Managerial Oligarchy

chapter 2|12 pages

Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Exiled in New York

From the Empire of Citadelle to the Empire State Building

chapter 3|24 pages

Norbert Wiener, Visiting the Beekman Hotel

The Cybernetic Moment in Manhattan

chapter 4|20 pages

Last Dinner in New York before the Big Flight

Saint-Exupéry, Burnham, Mead and Wiener Meet Again at La Vie Parisienne

chapter 5|31 pages

The United States as the “Arsenal of Democracy”

The Flight of World War II

chapter 6|31 pages

Back on New York Soil

Wandering from the Navy Yard in Brooklyn to the Great Management Networks in Manhattan

chapter 8|29 pages

Genealogy of Managerial Apocalypses

In the Footsteps of the American Event

chapter |18 pages

Conclusion

From “Management” to “Gestio”, from New York to Rome