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Growing up, I've always had a passion for history. This was inspired by games such as Caesar, Civilization, Age of Empires, Dynasty Warriors, and Pirates. This led me to educate myself on military and geopolitical history. While this makes for interesting conversation, and understanding of foreign policy, and some insights into the nature of leadership and group loyalty, it has become increasingly obvious that it is less useful for understanding humans and organizations and their day-to-day conflicts and pathologies. It is far too high-level and besides, most interactions do not happen under the stresses of anarchy found on the campaign field or international stage. Can anyone recommend any histories that they have found that go into detail about the history of more mundane sorts of events we are likely to find in our lives?

I'll start: Therac-25: A history of a deadly medical device design error and the organizational failure that accompanied it http://sunnyday.mit.edu/papers/therac.pdf



There are entire sub-disciplines within history devoted to this sort of stuff. Social history. Micro-history.

You could try The World We Have Lost. Or The Cheese and the Worms. Among others. Really, the options are almost infinite.


Outre Mer by Paul Bourget http://books.google.com/books?id=5lQTAAAAYAAJ

It is the account of a French man traveling around the United States in the 1890's It's not about organizations so much, but is a wonderful book about the general life of the times. It is the closest thing I have found to a time machine that let's you experience turn of the century America.

Democracy and the Party System in the United States: A study in extra constitutional government (1910) by Moisei Ostrogorski http://books.google.com/books?id=HmkPAAAAYAAJ&dq=democra... This is a very colorful political history of the United States. A lot of information about how the democratic institutions worked in practiced and evolved away from their formal and intended structures. Definitely a great antidote to the traditional civics class view of American democracy.


Question: how different is it from today?




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