Cano Sanchiz, Juan Manuel [UNESP]2019-10-032019-10-032018-01-01Industrial Archaeology Review. Abingdon: Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, v. 40, n. 2, p. 103-116, 2018.0309-0728http://hdl.handle.net/11449/184141Material sources have done little to contribute to research on Brazilian railway history (except for heritage studies and history of architecture). This interdisciplinary case study focuses on archaeological evidence to reflect on topics not often discussed in Brazil: the physical and functional configuration of the workplaces related to railways; the changing of these spaces through time due to the evolution of technology; and their characterisation as highly globalised sites. In doing so, we take the railway workshops of Jundiai (Sao Paulo) as a study sample and analyse it under the light of the expansion of industrialisation from the World's great powers to its outlying economies.103-116engRailway workshopsBrazilian industrialisationtechnology transferearly globalisationThe Morphology of a Working Place Linked to the World: The Railway Workshops of Jundiai (Brazil, 1892-1998)Artigo10.1080/03090728.2018.1488361WOS:000451219900006Acesso aberto