Prime Radiant/Machine Cards
MMDayCANONclass card

Ford Motor System (Fordism, 1908–1980)

infrastructure pace layer · 1908–1980

lifespan: 72 yrs · motor: pull

Class card for Fordism — the civilizational machine that reorganized mass production and mass consumption in the MM-Day apex. Founded as Ford Motor Company (1903) by Henry Ford in Detroit; the system proper begins with the Model T introduction at Highland Park in 1908. The defining structural innovations: (1) the moving assembly line (1913), which reduced chassis assembly time from 12.5 hours to 1.5 hours and set the template for flow production globally; (2) the Five-Dollar-Day wage (1914), which doubled prevailing manufacturing wages and constituted the worker-as-consumer feedback loop that became the political-economic logic of Fordism as a social formation; (3) River Rouge Complex (1928), the peak expression of vertical integration — iron ore entered one end, a finished automobile left the other in 48 hours, with 100,000 workers on site at WWII peak. Model T production reached 15 million units (1908–1927), constituting the first mass-automobile society. General Motors under Alfred Sloan (M-form, annual model change, installment credit) overtook Ford in market share ~1929, forcing adaptation; Ford emerged under Henry Ford II post-1945 with UAW bargaining. Fordism as a social formation — high wages, standardized goods, Keynesian mass consumption, state labor-management mediation — dominated the US economy and spread globally through the post-WWII industrial order. The 1973 and 1979 oil shocks and Japanese lean production (Toyota Production System, Taiichi Ohno) dissolved Fordism by ~1980 into post-Fordist forms. The assembly-line template itself persists as energetic_zombie: adapted by Toyota (lean), and re-instantiated at Tesla Gigafactory and Foxconn's global assembly platform. Sources: Chandler (1962); Hounshell (1984); Womack/Jones/Roos (1990); Brinkley (2003).

Machine type

corporeal

Plasticity

rigid

Substrate

corporeal social semiotic

Wave source

wave9-atlas-mm10-cluster-c-us-industrial

Inputs

  • Petroleum / gasoline (energy for automobile production and use)
  • Steel (body panels, chassis, engine blocks)
  • Industrial wage-labour (assembly-line workers, Taylorist work-study)
  • Financial capital (Ford family equity, bond issuance)

Outputs

  • Automobiles (Model T, Model A, post-WWII line)
  • Assembly-line production template (organizational technology diffusion)
  • Mass-consumption automobile society (byproduct: urban sprawl, auto pollution)
  • Automobile pollution and urban sprawl (byproduct matter)

Landscape pressures

  • General Motors Sloan M-form competitive pressure (1920s–1930s) (80% intensity)
  • UAW labor organizing and NLRB bargaining pressure (1935–1941) (75% intensity)
  • Oil shocks and Japanese lean-production competitive disruption (1973–1980) (90% intensity)

Intra-era couplings

Cross-era couplings

  • adapted_inheritance machine:tesla-gigafactory · 0.75 CANON
  • substrate_provision machine:foxconn-global-assembly-platform · 0.80 CANON
  • sublimation_coupling machine:uber-gig-platform-dm · 0.50 EXTRAP

State variables

legibility_coverage
0.88
CANON
fiat_progress_credibility
0.85
CANON
narrative_coherence
0.80
CANON
mm_byproduct_load
0.60
CANON
opp_strength
0.85
CANON
delanda_territorialization
0.85
CANON
delanda_coding
0.65
CANON
gravitational_weight
0.90
CANON
excess_complexity_index
0.40

Phase snapshots

MM-Day1908–1927complicated
MM-Day1927–1955complicated
MM-Day1955–1980complicated

Notable instances

  • Highland Park Ford Plant (1908) (1908) — Site of moving assembly line introduction (1913) and $5/day wage (1914). Archetype of Fordist production system. Now Nat…
  • River Rouge Complex (1928) (1928) — Vertical integration peak: 100k workers at WWII peak; iron ore → finished car 48h. Now produces Ford truck body panels —…
  • Model T (1908–1927) (1908) — 15 million units produced; first mass-market automobile; 'any color so long as it is black' (1914–1925); constituted mas…
  • Model A (1927–1931) (1927) — Successor to Model T after Sloan/GM competitive pressure forced Ford to abandon single-model strategy. 4.9M units. Ford'…
  • Ford F-150 (1948–present) (1948) — Best-selling vehicle in US since 1977; post-Fordist legacy product; assembly-line template applied to light truck. Live …
  • Tesla Gigafactory Berlin (2022) (2022) — Post-Fordist adapted-inheritance candidate: Tesla explicitly cites Ford assembly-line as design precedent; Gigafactory a…

Sources

  • Chandler, Alfred D. (1962). Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the American Industrial Enterprise · 90%
  • Hounshell, David A. (1984). From the American System to Mass Production, 1800-1932 · 92%
  • Womack, James P., Jones, Daniel T., and Roos, Daniel (1990). The Machine That Changed the World · 90%
  • Brinkley, Douglas (2003). Wheels for the World: Henry Ford, His Company, and a Century of Progress · 88%
  • Gramsci, Antonio (1934). Americanism and Fordism (Prison Notebooks) · 85%