"A challenging analysis of the relations between work and technology from an anti-essentialist perspective. Key issues concerning the production and consumption of technology are debated in a lucid and scholarly manner. Highly recommended." <i>Professor John Hassard, Keele University</i> <p>"The application of contemporary sociological models of technological change in the workplace is still in its infancy. <i>The Machine at Work</i> plays a crucial role in bridging this gap. It is one of the few recent publications helping the study of technological change at work to come of age." <i>Professor Richard Badham, University of Wollongong</i></p> <p>"This book is well written and accessible. Besides being of interest to scholars, especially students of sociology, organisational theory, innovation and management studies, <i>The Machine at Work</i> should provide stimulating reading for those with a more general interest in contemporary analyses of technology." <i>The Times Higher Education Supplement</i></p> <p>"A fine introductory text." <i>Information Technology and People</i></p> <p> "[A] fascinating book ... [It] raise[s] very real methodological questions and, what is more to the point, attempts to provide answers to them." <i>British Journal of Sociology</i></p>