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Guest Stefan Jaeger joins us to discuss the portrayal of engineers in literature and mass media.
- If his work life were a procedural crime drama, Brian’s not sure whether he’d be portrayed as a hero or a villain.
- Brian enjoyed the movies Real Genius and Sneakers for their representations of quasi-engineers.
- Our guest, Stefan Jaeger, is Managing Director of Member and Corporate Communications for the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE).
- Stefan has been working recently on a Raise the Bar initiative that seeks to require that engineers of the future obtain a masters’ degree, or an equivalent 30 credits, to be professionally licensed.
- Our guest has also been working on Vision 2025, an effort to prepare the civil engineering profession for tomorrow’s world.
- The ASCE has partnered with the American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC) and the American Public Works Association (APWA) to create the Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure.
- ASCE’s Communications and History and Heritage programs are also under Stefan.
- Carmen had not previously heard of National Engineer’s Week, which takes place every February.
- The ASCE puts out a report card on America’s infrastructure status every four years.
- In the 1990’s, Stefan heard a repeated refrain from engineers about the lack of an engineering-based TV series similar to the popular legal drama L.A. Law.
- Stefan gives a brief outline of the plot for his book, The Jackhammer Elegies.
- Carmen jokes about the movie Live Free or Die Hard being a documentary.
- Our guest’s book recently received an S.E.T. award from the Entertainment Industries Council for “accurate and impactful entertainment portraying and promoting the fields of science, engineering, technology and math.”
- The group discusses professional licensure, as well as the inevitable tension between engineering management and engineering design.
- Stefan raises the possibility that the stereotype of a steady, grounded engineer doesn’t always mesh well with the glamorous, exciting characters that TV and movie audiences like to watch.
- Falling Down, starring Michael Douglas, tells the story of a unemployed defense engineer who goes on a violent rampage… not exactly a positive role model!
- Arlington Road reveals the fictional terrorist activities of structural engineer Oliver Lang… again, not a very positive take on the engineering profession.
- In the 2005 movie, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Brad Pitt plays an assassin whose cover is that of an engineer.
- Jamie Foxx plays a career-minded attorney in Law Abiding Citizen. One of the attorney’s clients, Philadelphia engineer Clyde Shelton, feels that he has been treated unfairly by the legal system, and goes on a killing spree. Notice a trend here in movies about engineers?
- A 1996 film, Ridicule, tells the story of a minor aristocrat and engineer who hopes to reduce sickness and death around mosquito-infested swamps by installing a drainage system in 18th century France. Finally, one for the good guys!
- Henry Petroski, a civil engineer, wrote To Engineer is Human: The Role of Failure in Successful Design. We reviewed this book in Episode 18 of The Engineering Commons, which we titled “Failure.”
- Sam Florman, another civil engineer, wrote The Existential Pleasures of Engineering.
- Jeff notes how engineers fail to see the value of their non-technical work, as we discussed with James Trevelyan in Episode 19, “Value.”
- Stefan Jaeger can be reached by email: sjaeger ** at ** thejackhammerelegies ++ dot ++ com, or through a comment form at the bottom of the reviews page on his novel’s website.
Thanks to Stefan Jaeger for allowing us to use the cover of his award-winning book, “The Jackhammer Elegies” as the image for this episode. Podcast theme music provided by Paul Stevenson
How about Ayn Rand’s “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas Shrugged?” The main character, Howard Roark, in the Fountainhead was labeled as an architect, but was really a merger of architect and structural engineer. In Atlas Shrugged, the Hank Reardon character was an industrialist, but also could design a bridge to showcase a metallic alloy he developed.
I almost forgot! John Galt of Atlas Shrugged is a mechanical engineer that figured out how to use ambient static electricity to power a motor.