Title :
Demand modeling, new mode problems, and the $64 [sic] question: technological utopianism in America´s race to develop high speed rail technology
Author :
Sauer, Beverly A.
Author_Institution :
Maine Univ., Orono, ME, USA
fDate :
9/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The author analyzes two reports describing a now abandoned MagLev (magnetic levitation) rail system that would have run from Ontario, California, to Las Vegas, Nevada. Unlike traditional technical reports, the Budd Company Transit Division´s MagLev reports appeal to utopian visions of futuristic technologies that would solve America´s social and economic problems of the 1980s. The writers of these reports employ economic and political rhetoric such as risk modeling, market projections, appeals to the American dream and new frontier mentality, as well as xenophobic Japan-bashing, and downplay technical constraints on rail corridors. An analysis of these reports reveals the ethical and rhetorical dilemmas that writers face when the companies they work for seek funding for untried and untested visionary designs
Keywords :
management; technical presentation; American dream; Budd Company; Japan-bashing; MagLev; demand modelling; frontier mentality; high speed rail technology; magnetic levitation; market projections; new mode problems; risk modeling; technical reports; Engineering management; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic levitation; Proposals; Psychology; Rails; Rhetoric; Silicon carbide; Stress; Writing;
Journal_Title :
Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on