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Ruth Schwartz Cowan

American historian of technology (1941–2023) whose More Work for Mother revealed that household labor-saving devices increased rather than decreased women's total domestic work—a paradox now reproducing itself in AI-augmented knowledge work.
Ruth Schwartz Cowan transformed the study of technology by documenting what productivity metrics systematically miss: that tools designed to reduce labor routinely increase it by raising standards, eliminating collaborative structures, and generating invisible 'shadow labor.' Her 1983 landmark study of household appliances—washing machines, vacuum cleaners, refrigerators—demonstrated that mid-century American women spent more total hours on housework than their grandmothers, despite revolutionary technological advancement. The mechanism she identified—capability expansion, standard escalation, time absorption—operates with structural reliability across every domain where labor-saving technology is introduced. Cowan introduced the 'consumption junction' concept, insisting that social consequences are determined not by designers' intentions but by users' practices. Her work influenced feminist studies, science and technology studies, and organizational theory, earning her the Leonardo da Vinci Medal and election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Ruth Schwartz Cowan
Ruth Schwartz Cowan

In The You On AI Field Guide

Cowan's scholarship rejected the heroic-inventor narrative that dominated technology history in favor of use-centered analysis. Her doctoral work

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