During the second quarter of the nineteenth century, Londoners
were enthralled by a strange fluid called electricity. In examining
this period, Iwan Morus moves beyond the conventional focus on the
celebrated Michael Faraday to discuss other electrical
experimenters, who aspired to spectacular public displays of their
discoveries. Revealing connections among such diverse fields as
scientific lecturing, laboratory research, telegraphic
communication, industrial electroplating, patent conventions, and
innovative medical therapies, Morus also shows how electrical
culture was integrated into a new machine-dominated, consumer
society. He sees the history of science as part of the history of
production, and emphasizes the labor and material resources needed
to make electricity work.
"Frankenstein's Children" explains that Faraday, with his
colleagues at the Royal Society and the Royal Institution, looked
at science as the province of a highly trained elite, who presented
their abstract picture of nature only to select groups. The book
contrasts Faraday's views with those of other practitioners, to
whom science was a practical, skill-based activity open to all. In
venues such as the Galleries of Practical Science, electrical
phenomena were presented to a public less distinguished but no less
enthusiastic and curious than Faraday's audiences. William
Sturgeon, for instance, emphasized building apparatus and
exhibiting electrical phenomena, while chemists, instrument-makers,
and popular lecturers supported the London Electrical Society.
These previously little studied "electricians" contributed much to
the birth of "Frankenstein's children"--the not completely benign
effects of electricity on a new consumer world.
Originally published in 1998.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These paperback editions preserve the original texts of these
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editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly
increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the
thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since
its founding in 1905.
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