How did electricity enter everyday life in America? Using
Muncie, Indiana - the Lynds' now iconic Middletown - as a
touchstone, David Nye explores how electricity seeped into and
redefined American culture. With an eye for telling details from
archival sources and a broad understanding of cultural and social
history, he creates a thought-provoking panorama of a technology
fundamental to modern life.Emphasizing the experiences of ordinary
men and women rather than the lives of inventors and entrepreneurs,
Nye treats electrification as a set of technical possibilities that
were selectively adopted to create the streetcar suburb, the
amusement park, the "Great White Way," the assembly line, the
electrified home, and the industrialized farm. He shows how
electricity touched every part of American life, how it became an
extension of political ideologies, how it virtually created the
image of the modern city, and how it even pervaded colloquial
speech, confirming the values of high energy and speed that have
become hallmarks of the twentieth century. He also pursues the
social meaning of electrification as expressed in utopian ideas and
exhibits at world's fairs, and explores the evocation of electrical
landscapes in painting, literature, and photography.Electrifying
America combines chronology and topicality to examine the major
forms of light and power as they came into general use. It shows
that in the city electrification promoted a more varied landscape
and made possible new art forms and new consumption environments.
In the factory, electricity permitted a complete redesign of the
size and scale of operations, shifting power away from the shop
floor to managers. Electrical appliances redefined domestic work
and transformed the landscape of the home, while on the farm
electricity laid the foundation for today's agribusiness.David E.
Nye teaches American history at the University of Copenhagen. He
has published books on Henry Ford and Thomas Edison, as well as
Image Worlds, a study of photography and corporate identities at
General Electric.
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