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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page assessment of how furniture design changed in response to the introduction of such technologies as the radio and the television. The author asserts that comfort became a primary design criteria and points to the advent of the recliner and the modular couch as examples of the result. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPfurnDs.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Furniture design changes in response to a number of factors concerning our lifestyles. Design in many ways, however, seems cyclic. What was popular one
generation will disappear in the next but ultimately be revived several generations down the road. Factors such as changing lifeways are of obvious importance in affecting furniture design.
Typically at the center of these changes, however, are various technological introductions. Such was certainly the case in the twentieth century. The
twentieth century heralded many changes into popular mainstream America. The radio and the television are perhaps the most influential of those technologies in terms of the impact that they
had on our lifeways and, consequently, on our furniture design. It must be recognized, however, that the introduction of these technological novelties coupled with other sociological factors in its
impact on Americans and consequently on their furniture design. The television was introduced during one of the most difficult times of American history,
the Great Depression. The first marketing attempts for television in the United States occurred unsuccessfully in the 1920s. These early sets left much room for improvement and during
the early years of the Depression researchers were occupied with doing just that. The first long distance telecast was orchestrated by AT&T and succeeded in transmitting image and sound
from Washington D.C. to New York City in 1927. In 1939, after a long climb from that original dim-pictured television in the 1920s, television had made its true advent
into the family household. The journey of television had, however, in reality just begun. The American public simply did not
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