Bryan Pfaffenberger is a retired anthropologist and science and technology studies scholar who taught science, technology, and society at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Democratizing Information: End-User Searching and the Rise of Online Databases.
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Description
Table of Contents Preface and Acknowledgments Introduction Part One: The Technological Drama, 1888-1898 1. The 19th Century's Florida 2000: The 1888 Presidential Election and the Rise of the Australian Ballot 2. An Honest Ballot Freely Cast: Jacob Myers's Heterogeneous Invention 3. Protecting the Freeman's Will: The Battle to Establish the Voting Machine's Legality 4. A Fatal Objection: Myers' Downfall 5. Divide and Conquer: The Road to the Lever Voting Machine Part Two: The Patent War (1898-1914) 6. Voting Machine Trust: The Struggle to Control the Lever Machine 7. The Voting Machine Combine: Preventing Others from Selling a Practical Voting Machine 8. Competition, Merger Mania, and the Road to Monopoly Part Three: The Lever Machine Infrastructure, 1915-2008 9. Absolute Security: The Marriage of Machine and Law 10. Machine Politics: Tammany Hall's War Against the Voting Machine 11. Voting Machines Strike Back: Fusion Voting and Tammany's Demise 12. Voting Machines and Boss Rule: From Statewide System to Big-City Fraud Protection 13. Boom and Bust: The Rise and Fall of the National Lever Machine Infrastructure 14. The Struggle to Retain Lever Voting Machines: New York State Conclusion: The Lever's Lessons

