Academic literature on the topic 'Singer Sewing Machine Company'

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Journal articles on the topic "Singer Sewing Machine Company"

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De La Cruz-Fernández, Paula A. "Marketing the Hearth: Ornamental Embroidery and the Building of the Multinational Singer Sewing Machine Company." Enterprise and Society 15, no. 03 (September 2014): 442–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1467222700015949.

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This study examines the Singer Sewing Machine Company’s strategies for selling family sewing machines on a global scale. In marketing the sewing machine, the American-headquartered Singer focused on ornamental embroidery or “fancy” sewing, defining home sewing as art, to distance the company and the appliance from negative perceptions of women’s garment work as industrial manufacturing. Singer created its Embroidery Department in the early 1890s in response to consumers’ sewing preferences. The department reflects how the home became a site where global capitalism was constructed and articulated. Singer’s Embroidery Department had representatives in many countries, coordinating expositions and other advertising. In the case of Singer in Spain and the United States, women who took part in the department’s work were an essential part of the corporate-integrated operation. This article examines the relationship between Singer’s corporate strategies and gender and culture in Spain and the United States.
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de la Cruz-Fernández, Paula A. "Multinationals and Gender: Singer Sewing Machine and Marketing in Mexico, 1890–1930." Business History Review 89, no. 3 (2015): 531–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007680515000756.

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Headquartered in the United States, the Singer Sewing Machine Co. did business all around the world in the early twentieth century. It regularly encountered wars, economic nationalism, and revolutions; in response, it normally created subsidiaries or gave in to expropriation. After the revolution in Mexico (1910–1920), Singer's marketing organization maintained normal operations and even prospered. The company succeeded, in part, by constantly associating the sewing machine with the idea of “modern” womanhood in Revolutionary Mexico. By revealing Singer's marketing strategies and focusing on gender, this article shows that multinational corporations and Latin American governments were not always at odds and could sometimes forge a profitable relationship.
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de la Cruz-Fernández, Paula A. "Singer’s embroidery department as an enterprise of beauty." Entreprises et histoire 111, no. 2 (September 6, 2023): 47–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eh.111.0047.

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Le rôle des entreprises et des organisations dans l’élaboration des tendances et des préférences esthétiques des consommateurs ne se limite pas à l’industrie de la beauté. L’histoire du Département artistique, une unité de la Singer Sewing Machine Company dont le personnel était majoritairement féminin, met en lumière le rôle crucial que jouent souvent les consommateurs et les marchés dans le design des produits. Créé dans les années 1870 aux débuts du développement de Singer, le Département artistique a élaboré diverses stratégies pour commercialiser les machines à coudre et inciter les particuliers et les ménages à les acheter. Les employées qui formaient la majorité du personnel de ce département créaient des modèles, concevaient de nouveaux produits et fournissaient des instructions sur l’utilisation des machines à coudre pour créer des broderies destinées à la décoration intérieure et à l’ornementation des vêtements. Ce faisant, les représentantes de vente, qui bien souvent n’étaient pas directement salariées de Singer, comblaient le fossé entre l’art, l’industrie et la domesticité et elles contribuèrent à positionner la multinationale comme un acteur clé dans les définitions culturelles et esthétiques de la beauté et de l’ornementation, qui furent à la fois globales et localisées. La beauté est donc « gérée », comme l’ont démontré les spécialistes de l’histoire des entreprises. Cependant l’attention portée à l’industrie cosmétique et à la marchandisation des soins corporels et de l’embellissement a laissé de côté d’importants espaces où la beauté est également définie et où les entreprises ont joué un rôle majeur. Cet article élargit l’analyse des entreprises de la beauté en explorant le rôle des entreprises et de leurs acteurs dans le façonnement des préférences esthétiques dans des domaines moins visibles de la maison, à savoir la décoration intérieure et la confection. Les stratégies de marketing mises en œuvre par la Singer Sewing Machine Company pendant plus de sept décennies visaient à répondre aux sensibilités esthétiques et aux attentes culturelles des consommateurs, au-delà des aspects fonctionnels et économiques de leurs machines à coudre, tels que la vitesse et l’utilité. Dans un premier temps, l’article retrace l’histoire du Département artistique et examine les sources disponibles pour l’étudier. Ensuite, en s’appuyant sur des exemples provenant du monde entier, l’article étudie les principales stratégies conçues et créées par le personnel de Singer. En conclusion, l’article offre une réflexion sur la gestion de la beauté comme industrie globale et son influence significative sur des aspects plus vastes de la vie quotidienne.
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De La Cruz-Fernandez, P. A. "Marketing the Hearth: Ornamental Embroidery and the Building of the Multinational Singer Sewing Machine Company." Enterprise and Society 15, no. 3 (July 25, 2014): 442–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/es/khu031.

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Gómez, María Rosa. "Music, reading and embroidery: the social force of the sewing machine of the Singer Company and the School of Catholic Workers (1875-1930)." Ehquidad Revista Internacional de Políticas de Bienestar y Trabajo Social, no. 19 (January 15, 2022): 103–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.15257/ehquidad.2023.0004.

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The opinions expressed in the press regarding education in this period have two directions: on the one hand, they criticize the scarcity and poor material conditions of schools, and on the other hand, they try to create an awareness that serves to transmit their own ideology but what about non-formal education? Parallel to this educational universe, non-regulated education is developed, outside legal limits and promoted by the most humanistic social agents within the context of charity. This article aims to show some practices of this teaching, such as music academies, popular libraries, night and Sunday schools for Catholic workers in the city of Elche and the Singer Company, under the gaze of historical sociology.
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TAYLOR, JEAN GELMAN. "The Sewing-Machine in Colonial-Era Photographs: A record from Dutch Indonesia." Modern Asian Studies 46, no. 1 (November 25, 2011): 71–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x11000576.

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AbstractEveryday technologies of the nineteenth century—mass-produced items that were small, sturdy, and affordable—transformed the daily lives of working people in Asian colonies. There is already a large literature on colonial technology transfer and a specialist literature on the sewing-machine, which draws on Singer archives, production figures, sales techniques, and advertising to establish uptake by households from North America to the Philippines, India, China, and Egypt. Still, documentation of how and why imported objects such as the sewing-machine were appropriated is difficult to find because, unlike elites, ordinary people left few records of their own. Here a visual archive is investigated to complement existing studies. Photographs and early moving pictures from the former Dutch East Indies show that ordinary Indonesians sought and appropriated imported goods such as the sewing-machine. The colonial camera's visual record of sewing-machine operators displaces attention from the more impersonal trade and productivity statistics. It brings the silent user into the history of technological uptake and allows us to consider the repercussions across a wide social band and period. Indigenous tailors and seamstresses expanded their own work options. Through the Singer they fitted out and launched their compatriots into modern jobs and lifestyles in the Dutch colony. The sewing-machine changed habits, manners, and expectations; machine operators influenced senses of propriety, fashion, and status. Appropriation of mundane technology demonstrates that modernization was not only a process trickling down to the masses from Westernizing elites; it also bubbled up from below.
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7

Godley, Andrew. "Selling the Sewing Machine Around the World: Singer’s International Marketing Strategies, 1850–1920." Enterprise & Society 7, no. 2 (June 2006): 266–314. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1467222700004080.

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The sewing machine was one of the first standardized and mass-marketed complex consumer durables to have been diffused widely around the world before 1920. This global diffusion was almost the sole responsibility of one firm, Singer. Despite its American origins, Singer’s success lay principally overseas. New data provide insight into the company’s international marketing strategies. Although the firm had a reputation for marketing sophistication, Singer did not depend on price discrimination, extensive advertising, or loss-leading expansion of retail networks in its overseas markets. Rather, its success was due to the characteristics of consumer demand for sewing machines, features that combined with its strategic investments in market support services and in its selling organization to create Singer’s enormous competitive advantages in foreign markets.
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Ulutaş, Alptekin. "New Grey Integrated Model to Solve Machine Selection Problem for a Textile Company." Fibres and Textiles in Eastern Europe 28, no. 1(139) (February 29, 2020): 20–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0013.5853.

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The textile sector has become an indispensable part of the Turkish economy. The sewing machine is a long-lasting and easy-to-use tool widely used in the garment industry, which is a branch of the textile industry. The sewing machine is an indispensable production tool for the textile industry and sewing machine selection is a significant decision for the production performance of textile companies. Selecting an appropriate sewing machine increases production performance, while selecting an improper one reduces production performance. The sewing machine selection problem is a typical machine selection issue. Many criteria, such as cost, productivity, safety etc. are considered in the machine selection. Therefore, MCDM methods are applicable to solve the machine selection problem. This study develops an integrated grey MCDM model including Grey AHP and ROV-G to select the most appropriate sewing machine for an apparel textile company.
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Nemeša, Ineta, and Marija Pešić. "Blindstitch sewing machines in the world sewing equipment market." Tekstilna industrija 72, no. 1 (2024): 44–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/tekstind2401044n.

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The blindstitch sewing machine are used for different sewing operations: hemming and felling operations, beltloop manufacturing, padding, spot tacking, blind stitching of double side/face seams. The web-sites of sewing equipment producers were analyzed to see the availability of blindstitch sewing machines in the world's market. 68 manufacturers from 143 researched companies produce one or more types of blindstitch sewing machines. The blindstitch machines of stitch 103 are manufactured the most often. The machines of stitch class 300 are developed for specific applications manufacturing men suits. The companies Strobel and Maier are most well known blindstitch machine manufacturers. The company Strobel has widest offer of class 300 blindstith machines. The company Maier produces sewing machines for industrially manufactured and tailored clothing, as well as, for manufacturing home and technical textile goods.
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THAO, PHAN THANH, and DUY-NAM PHAN. "IMPROVE BUILDING DATABASE ON THE OPERATION PROCESS AND PERFORMANCE TIME FOR SEWING OPERATIONS OF KNITTED GARMENT PRODUCTS." Fibres and Textiles 30, no. 4 (2023): 58–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.15240/tul/008/2023-4-007.

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This paper presents the findings of the study of building and completion of a standard database on the operation process and sewing time for 02 typical products from knitted fabrics, namely Polo-Shirt and TShirt. The study process is carried out based on applying MTM (Methods Time measurement) standard time analysis method and predetermined time system GSD (General Sewing Data). In this research, we have inherited the results from previous studies including Classifying the main parts sewing linkages, formulated sewing technology process and theoretical analysis of the process of manipulating sewing of the main parts, linkages of the 02 classical textile products including Polo-Shirt and T-Shirt by MTM standard time analysis method and GSD predetermined time system; The studies work of the group of authors on the experimental research content determines the simultaneous influence of a group of factors: distance to place the sewing element (cm), the rotation angle of the sewing element (˚), the size of the sewing element, the number of element layers involved in the sewing, the light intensity (lux) and the skills of sewing workers (grade worker) to the sewing time of knitting products and research simultaneous influences of a group of technological factors including: seam length (cm) and stitches per centimeter (stitches/cm), experiment on 4 sewing devices such as 1-needle lockstitch machine, overlock machine (1 needle and 3 threads) and (2 needles and 4 threads), coverstitch machine (2 needles and 3 threads); and with 3 kinds of single jersey fabrics, which are thin, medium, and thick fabrics to sewing time on the machine of Polo-Shirt and T-Shirt products. The above research results show that there is a big difference between the actual values and theoretically calculated values according to MTM method, GSD predetermined time system, the authors have determined a set of adjustment coefficients for the former and the latter for two values of sewing preparation operation time and sewing time on the machine. We have tested the above research results in 03 enterprises: Hanoi Star Fashion Co., Ltd., Tinh Loi Garment Company and Ha Nam Hanosimex Company Limited and received a lot of practical comments from businesses.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Singer Sewing Machine Company"

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Isler, Sarioglu Aysen. "My Faithfull Machine: The Role Of Technology In Daily Life The Case Of Singer Sewing Machine In Turkey." Master's thesis, METU, 2011. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12613725/index.pdf.

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This thesis aims to investigate the role of domestic technology in daily life. It focuses on the impact of household technologies upon women&rsquo
s lives and attempts to address the questions of how women could create an agency through technology to transform their lives and how a technological appliance could act to empower women. Of all household technologies, Singer sewing machine was chosen owing to its representative nature. Accordingly, the thesis provides a brief history of Singer Company in order to describe the major aspects of both the Singer Company and the sewing machine technology. It is argued that sewing machine technology became a convenient tool for women to transform their lives both economically and socially. The testimonies of the women interviewed for this thesis show that their technological skills were a significant part of their identity. Furthermore, middle-class Turkish women used this technology to meet middle class standards whenever they and their families aspired to.
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TSAI, CHENG-YI, and 蔡正益. "Evaluation and Management of Sewing Machine Parts Supplier-Take Z Company as an Example." Thesis, 2018. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/6k4juy.

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碩士
國立勤益科技大學
工業工程與管理系
106
The history of sewing machine has been more than 150 years. Which were extensively applied in food, clothing, housing, transportation, education, entertainment and other daily live. Sewing machines play an important role in implementing products production. Taiwan is the most massive export country in sewing machine. And Taichung is the most production base in the parts of sewing machine. The suppliers supply more than 300 major components of sewing machine, which are classified into seven types of producing technologies. Such as punch, bearing, powder metallurgy, aluminum, zinc alloy, molding, and electronics to achieve the tolerance in 0.1mm for the sewing products.    The study is taking Z Company as an example to analyze its 120 various types of suppliers by SWOT, Delphi, AHP and supplier evaluation sheets to grade the suppliers with scores of A, B to C and classify them accordingly. The suppliers with grade B and C will be counseled to meet the target of grade A so as to provide material with stable quality and reasonable price to Z Company. And establish partnership between Z Company and suppliers by the process of counseling to meet the goal of sustainable development.
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CHEN, CHEN-YI, and 陳振益. "A Study of MES Implementation Benefit of Sewing Machine Manufacturing: A Case of X Company." Thesis, 2018. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/s3233u.

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碩士
逢甲大學
經營管理碩士在職學位學程
106
The Case Company is a large-scale ODM manufacturer of household sewing machines and has taken a leading position in this industry. The profitability has been steadily good. Also, since the industry is an oligopoly market and there has been no entry or exit in this industry, the intensity of rivalry is not very high. Therefore, the case company has kept using the same site management methods over the years. All the data of the manufacturing process including production data and product quality are collected by employees and processed on the next day, so they tend to be “lagging indicators”. As the technology has advanced and management philosophy has changed, the case company also consider about how to change these “lagging indicators” into “leading indicators”. In addition, it also plans to increase the traceability of products. As long as customers address product problems, the company can access to all relevant data from the product tracing system to find reasons. In addition, it is possible to deal with products with specific lot number. The company also needs a system to evaluate the effectiveness. Therefore, the case company decided to implement the MES (Manufacturing Execution System) to solve these problems. The research focuses on the process, the impact and the effectiveness of introducing the system. Interviews with main users of the system are conducted to prove that the system is effective and that the goals set before implementing are met. The conclusion proves the effectiveness of this system and shows the key success factors. Nevertheless, the system has imperfections. Therefore, this research also provides suggestions for the case company, and serves as a reference for the following research.
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CNEN, CHENG CHENG, and 陳政誠. "The sewing machine maintenance crews research of education and training system-Take Nguyen Luc company as an example." Thesis, 2008. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/tq93ts.

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碩士
國立高雄大學
國際高階經營管理碩士在職專班(IEMBA)
96
This study is aimed to establish a set of professional education and training courses of needles using for the maintenance in the footwear industry. The sewing technology in Taiwan was passing down by the experiences in the master and apprentice system. Thus the theoretical foundations are weak and non-standard. Maintenances in needle industry don’t usually have a high level education, They are semi-producer, considered as service personnel. They communicate with operator by needling technology, play a roll as medical person for sewing machines, and affect the productivity and dispatching directly. Therefore, it is more then important that maintenances should qualify for both operator and sewing machines. Needling industries are active in Taiwan, China, and Vietnam, the skilled maintenances, however, are so deficient - no professional educations or training courses to cultivate. Therefore this study is going to provide a set of maintenances training courses, for-needling industries, especially our company to increase the competitiveness and differences of our business, and there by increase the market share.
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Shen, Shu-Ming, and 沈素銘. "A Game -Theoretic Approach of the Competitive Strategies inTaiwan Home Sewing Machine Industry-An Example from A Company." Thesis, 2018. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/devu79.

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碩士
淡江大學
國際行銷碩士在職專班
106
This study employs the PARTS analysis of Game Theory on Home Sewing Machine Industry in Taiwan. And, this study takes Company A as an Example. The purpose of this study tries to summarize the advantages based on the case company and to utilize these ideas for future strategy mapping and development. The case company is adept its own three-in-one (Sewing machines, Accessories and Talent) business philosophy and leads to leisure sewing culture as its own goal. Professional talent teaching to promote the sewing culture, sophisticated sewing peripheral products to meet customer needs, superior quality, and functional and complete sewing machine for customers to choose are all the keys for its success. In order to realize the goal of sewing art and sewing life, making sewing an extension of art is the realizations of life applications. By acting well-known brand sewing machine, we change the rules of the game in order to casus changes. The existing competitive advantages of studying case conclude the protection system of the entry and exit barriers, the establishment of strategic alliances, the establishment of its main strengths and strategic alliances for the company in the case of the adoption of the game.
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Hsu, Ding-Hsien, and 許鼎賢. "Effect of Innovation and Internationalization Strategy on Business Performance ~ A Case Study of Leading Company in Industrial Sewing Machine Industry." Thesis, 2007. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/85988993667267919975.

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碩士
大同大學
事業經營學系(所)
97
According to difference of research nature, this research belongs to reality study, by analyzing the examples and cases of the main topic. Therefore the case study will be Research Methodology of this research. This research discovered that (1) Innovation affects business performance: When market declined by changes of its structure, and challenged survive of business. The company first considered to do innovation activity of technology, management, market, process, product etc., and then innovation of service, sales etc., that have to change or effect of environment through innovation, to get advantage of competition and lasting operation. K Company successfully employed 5 item’s innovation activities as technology, market, product, management, and quality etc. In the past 30 years, they do activities in time of different stages and persist in that, finally establish international market scales widespread in global. (2) Internationalization strategy to be effect of business performance: K Company used that theory for raising strategy in time of comfortable descript as following: 1. Porter’s strategy of export base. The company then base in Taiwan for building ability of export to get new market &; raise profit. 2. Porter’s strategy of investing subsidiary company overseas. Beside the company obtained results of keep market in global, more result that K Company had adopted competency of region changes of market. 3. Bartlett &; Ghoshal’s globalization strategy of costing down and seeking scales of economics. 4. Bartlett &; Ghoshal’s transnational strategy of integrating production 5. Porter’s simple global strategy of obtaining lower cost and base in Taiwan for service of global. The contribution of this research to academic research is (1) It discusses the connection between innovation and internationalization strategy. (2) It can be the reference of other companies intending to get into global market. And the contribution of business has raised that decision timing of entrepreneur about competitive strategy and orientation of business’s development will be effective of model of brand development i.e. orientation of innovation of product and schedule of internationalization. And if the entrepreneur has movement of lasting innovation, and persist in lasting execute of innovation, which will be relation to innovation efficiency.
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Books on the topic "Singer Sewing Machine Company"

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Godley, Andrew. Selling the sewing machine around the world: Singer's international marketing strategies, 1850-1914. Reading: University of Reading, Dept. of Economics, 2000.

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Godley, Andrew. Singer in Britain: The diffusion of sewing machine technology and its impact on the clothing industry in the United Kingdom, 1860-1905. Reading, England: University of Reading, Dept. of Economics, 1995.

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Ruth, Brandon. Singer and the sewing machine: A capitalist romance. New York: Kodansha International, 1996.

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Johnson-Srebro, Nancy. Featherweight 221: The perfect portable : appreciating, finding and using the Singer model 221 Featherweight portable sewing machine. Tunkhannock, PA: Silver Star Pub., 1992.

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Edwards, John. Machine embroidery: Dorothy Benson and the Embroidery Department of the Singer Machine Company. Dorking: Bayford Books, 1988.

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The first conglomerate: 145 years of the Singer Sewing Machine Company. Brunswick, ME: Audenreed Press, 1999.

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Bissell, Don. The First Conglomerate 145 Years of the Singer Sewing Machine Company. Harvest Lane Press, 2010.

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Grevden işgale Singer eylemleri: (1964-1967-1969). Şişli, İstanbul: Sosyal Tarih Yayınları, 2015.

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Singer. Orlando: Harcourt, 2009.

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HOUSTON, CHARLES A., and NEWTON A. BURGESS. American Safety Table Company, Petitioner, v. Singer Sewing Machine Company. U.S. Supreme Court Transcript of Record with Supporting Pleadings. Gale, U.S. Supreme Court Records, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Singer Sewing Machine Company"

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Wickramasinghe, Nira. "Fashioning a Market." In Cultures in Motion. Princeton University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691159096.003.0006.

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This chapter examines the role of the Singer sewing machine in fashioning a consumer market in colonial Lanka, now known as Sri Lanka. More specifically, it narrates the fashioning of a market imaginary, which indexed modernity as desire installed through the Singer machine. The chapter first provides an overview of the Singer Sewing Machine Company and the market for sewing machines before discussing the company's global expansion. It then considers the Asian market for the Singer sewing machine and the Singer Company's venture in Ceylon/Lanka. It also analyzes the diffusion of the Singer sewing machine in Lanka and the marketing strategies used by Singer in the country. Finally, it explores how the Singer sewing machine intersected with the issue of race and the civilizing mission and how the market imaginary was exposed in circuits of communication such as advertisements, discourses of Sinhalese modern nationalism, and the economy of the machines itself.
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Bently, Lionel. "Singer Sewing Machine." In A History of Intellectual Property in 50 Objects, 72–79. Cambridge University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108325806.009.

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"Chapter 1. Following the Singer Sewing Machine." In Metallic Modern, 16–40. Berghahn Books, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781782382430-004.

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"CHAPTER 5. Fashioning a Market: The Singer Sewing Machine in Colonial Lanka." In Cultures in Motion, 134–64. Princeton University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400849895-007.

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Conference papers on the topic "Singer Sewing Machine Company"

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Sinichenko, Vladimir. "Sewing Company “Singer” in Russia and Eastern Siberia During the First World War." In Irkutsk Historical and Economic Yearbook 2021. Baikal State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17150/978-5-7253-3040-3.19.

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The article considers issues related to the liquidation company of the Russian state in relation to enterprises of “subjects of hostile powers” during the First World War. As part of this company, the American company Singer and K. fell under sanctions. Since no information was established about the espionage of the company’s leadership, the company reopened its branches in early 1916. After that, the conflict between Russia and the United States was eliminated over the actions of the Russian authorities against the American company.
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