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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      December 2020
      January 2021
      ISBN:
      9781108902700
      9781108830669
      9781108828543
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.6kg, 322 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.48kg, 322 Pages
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    Book description

    In the second half of the nineteenth century, British firms and engineers built, laid, and ran a vast global network of submarine telegraph cables. For the first time, cities around the world were put into almost instantaneous contact, with profound effects on commerce, international affairs, and the dissemination of news. Science, too, was strongly affected, as cable telegraphy exposed electrical researchers to important new phenomena while also providing a new and vastly larger market for their expertise. By examining the deep ties that linked the cable industry to work in electrical physics in the nineteenth century - culminating in James Clerk Maxwell's formulation of his theory of the electromagnetic field - Bruce J. Hunt sheds new light both on the history of the Victorian British Empire and on the relationship between science and technology.

    Awards

    Winner, 2021 Antique Wireless Association Houck Award for Documentation

    Winner, 2022 Choice Outstanding Academic Titles

    Reviews

    'Lucid, brilliantly well-informed and replete with fresh insights, Imperial Science is destined to be an indispensable classic. Bruce J. Hunt gives us a rich account of how radical developments in cable telegraphy and the theory of electromagnetism were intertwined, with profound consequences for the everyday lives of millions of people all over the world.'

    Graham Farmelo - Churchill College, University of Cambridge

    'Well before the internet, information flowed through British submarine cable telegraphy. Bruce J. Hunt’s fascinating study explores how physicists and telegraph engineers managed competing methods and demands to create this first global communications system. These nerves of empire transformed international affairs, accelerated commerce, provided rapid access to news, and revolutionized physics.'

    Kathryn Olesko - Georgetown University

    'With impressive skill, Bruce J. Hunt brings together the commercial and engineering practices of Victorian telegraphy with the construction of the new physics of electromagnetic field theory. In so doing, he powerfully reinvigorates the history of nineteenth-century physics as a major academic arena grounded upon, but not determined by, imperial engineering and technology.'

    Crosbie Smith - University of Kent

    ‘Illustrated with period images and impeccably referenced, Hunt's remarkable, scholarly text will encourage nonspecialist readers to engage … Highly recommended.’

    E. J. Delaney Source: Choice Connect

    'In this important book our foremost historian of British telegraphy and Maxwellian electromagnetic field theory gives a compelling account of the intimate relation of telegraph engineering and mathematical physics over some forty years.’

    M. Norton Wise Source: Metascience

    'Hunt’s book contributes to a historiography which already consists of excellent works ... The added value of the book is in providing evidence, as no other authors have done so far, of the technological steps leading to the great telegraph connection across the Atlantic and later around the world. Hunt also makes the various themes understandable to non-experts, building a compelling and well-illustrated narrative.'

    Andrea Giuntini Source: Technology and Culture

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    Contents

    • 2 - Wildman Whitehouse, William Thomson, and the First Atlantic Cable
      pp 37-96

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