
Spare Parts
A Global History of a Modern Problem, 1940-1980
Philip Scranton(Author)
Johns Hopkins University Press
Will be published approx. on 10. November 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
416 pages
978-1-4214-5544-0 (ISBN)
Description
How repair components of machines reconstructed the distribution networks that connected production to consumption globally.
When machines break, entire systems are exposed. Spare Parts tells the global history of replacement components and shows how their absence-or abundance-has shaped warfare, industry, and everyday life in the twentieth century. Philip Scranton traces the production, distribution, and use of spare parts across capitalist, socialist, and postcolonial economies from World War II through the Cold War.
During WWII, parts proved as decisive as fuel or ammunition, determining whether tanks moved, aircraft flew, and factories functioned. In its aftermath, parts shortages became a chronic problem in centrally planned economies, while market societies faced different dilemmas created by rapid technological change, obsolescence, and corporate strategy. Focusing on vehicles, agricultural machinery, and radio and television technologies, Scranton reveals how repair practices differed across political systems. In socialist states, chronic shortages encouraged improvisation, scavenging, and informal exchange. In capitalist economies, parts became tools of profit, control, and planned abandonment, often pushing consumers toward replacement rather than repair. Scranton also follows spare parts beyond the superpowers, examining how postcolonial nations navigated inherited infrastructures and how parts functioned as instruments of geopolitical leverage.
Charting the decline of repair culture in the late twentieth century, as durable vehicles and disposable electronics reshaped expectations about maintenance and longevity, Spare Parts reframes a familiar frustration as a central feature of modern history and offers new insight into technology, power, and the hidden systems that keep the world running.
When machines break, entire systems are exposed. Spare Parts tells the global history of replacement components and shows how their absence-or abundance-has shaped warfare, industry, and everyday life in the twentieth century. Philip Scranton traces the production, distribution, and use of spare parts across capitalist, socialist, and postcolonial economies from World War II through the Cold War.
During WWII, parts proved as decisive as fuel or ammunition, determining whether tanks moved, aircraft flew, and factories functioned. In its aftermath, parts shortages became a chronic problem in centrally planned economies, while market societies faced different dilemmas created by rapid technological change, obsolescence, and corporate strategy. Focusing on vehicles, agricultural machinery, and radio and television technologies, Scranton reveals how repair practices differed across political systems. In socialist states, chronic shortages encouraged improvisation, scavenging, and informal exchange. In capitalist economies, parts became tools of profit, control, and planned abandonment, often pushing consumers toward replacement rather than repair. Scranton also follows spare parts beyond the superpowers, examining how postcolonial nations navigated inherited infrastructures and how parts functioned as instruments of geopolitical leverage.
Charting the decline of repair culture in the late twentieth century, as durable vehicles and disposable electronics reshaped expectations about maintenance and longevity, Spare Parts reframes a familiar frustration as a central feature of modern history and offers new insight into technology, power, and the hidden systems that keep the world running.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Baltimore, MD
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
24 s/w Abbildungen
24 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-4214-5544-0 (9781421455440)
DOI
10.56021/9781421455440
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Philip Scranton is an emeritus Board of Governors professor of history at Rutgers University. He is the author of Endless Novelty: Specialty Production and American Industrialization, 1865-1925, and a coauthor of Reimagining Business History.
Content
List of Tables
Introduction
1. Navigating a World of Parts
Part One. Spare Parts and World War
2. Parts for Weapons: World War II Tanks and Aircraft
3. War Horsepower: Managing Military Trucks Under Capitalism and Communism
4. Priorities and Improvisations: Parts Supply on the Home Fronts
Part Two. Cold War Era Spares, 1946-1980
5. Permanent Contradictions: Farm Equipment Spares in the USSR and Poland
6. The Curious Course of Soviet Televisions
7. The Perils of Competition: Parts for US Radios and Televisions
8. The Auto Parts Maze: The US and the USSR
9. Parts Dilemmas in Postcolonial Nations
Epilogue: The Partial Eclipse of Spare Parts
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Introduction
1. Navigating a World of Parts
Part One. Spare Parts and World War
2. Parts for Weapons: World War II Tanks and Aircraft
3. War Horsepower: Managing Military Trucks Under Capitalism and Communism
4. Priorities and Improvisations: Parts Supply on the Home Fronts
Part Two. Cold War Era Spares, 1946-1980
5. Permanent Contradictions: Farm Equipment Spares in the USSR and Poland
6. The Curious Course of Soviet Televisions
7. The Perils of Competition: Parts for US Radios and Televisions
8. The Auto Parts Maze: The US and the USSR
9. Parts Dilemmas in Postcolonial Nations
Epilogue: The Partial Eclipse of Spare Parts
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index