American Lucifers: The Dark History of Artificial Light, 1750–1865

Author:   Jeremy Zallen
Publisher:   The University of North Carolina Press
ISBN:  

9781469672540


Pages:   368
Publication Date:   01 August 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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American Lucifers: The Dark History of Artificial Light, 1750–1865


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Full Product Details

Author:   Jeremy Zallen
Publisher:   The University of North Carolina Press
Imprint:   The University of North Carolina Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.30cm
Weight:   0.229kg
ISBN:  

9781469672540


ISBN 10:   1469672545
Pages:   368
Publication Date:   01 August 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

American Lucifers is a methodologically ingenious, elegantly written labor history of the light-generating industries that preceded the electric light. . . . Its incisive, empathetic investigation into the daily lives of the workers who bore the costs of technological innovation makes it a unique, revelatory, and highly memorable study of the profoundly transformative effects of lighting technologies. --Journal of Interdisciplinary History American Lucifers warrants great acclaim. . . . [For] the expert craft of Zallen's history, engaging writing, extremely thorough source work . . . and the message it so clearly delivers: that when we literally illuminate our own spaces of experience, we also illuminate a crucial opportunity to make the world's socioeconomic systems more equitable and more sustainable. --North Carolina Historical Review An ambitious book. . . . handsomely produced, with illustrations and maps, and will appeal principally to history buffs. --Library Journal As we face another great transition, from fossil fuels to alternative energies, Zallen's narrative is timely--echoing in the high human and environmental costs of dramas playing out in Nigerian oilfields and the smog of Indian cities. --David E. Nye, Nature Conventional histories of lighting celebrate technological progress, but Zallen's inspired and original study illuminates some darker corners of American history. . . . American Lucifers provides a powerful analysis through its copious information, but Zallen's imaginative and extensive use of primary sources makes it exceptionally captivating. --Ambix Readers of Jeremy Zallen's superb history of illumination will gain a new appreciation for the origins of artificial light. . . . Zallen uses clear, often poetic, prose to focus on the labor required to bring illumination into the modern era, with a healthy respect for the sweat and suffering that process required. --Journal of Southern History Written clearly, with dashes of literary flair. . . . The connections it draws . . . show lighting to be a useful frame within which to understand how global trade, regional commerce, and professional and domestic labor were coordinated in the century or so before electrification. --Choice Reviews Zallen has written a truly innovative book that will surely have scholars and lay readers alike burning the candle at both ends. --Technology and Culture Zallen writes beautifully. He tells his story through vividly worded, richly researched tales. . . . To remind us . . . that every part of economic life connects us to the work of others, and that work can be very grim and very dark indeed. --The New England Quarterly


Written clearly, with dashes of literary flair. . . . The connections it draws . . . show lighting to be a useful frame within which to understand how global trade, regional commerce, and professional and domestic labor were coordinated in the century or so before electrification.--Choice Reviews American Lucifers warrants great acclaim. . . . [For] the expert craft of Zallen's history, engaging writing, extremely thorough source work . . . and the message it so clearly delivers: that when we literally illuminate our own spaces of experience, we also illuminate a crucial opportunity to make the world's socioeconomic systems more equitable and more sustainable.--North Carolina Historical Review Zallen has written a truly innovative book that will surely have scholars and lay readers alike burning the candle at both ends.--Technology and Culture Readers of Jeremy Zallen's superb history of illumination will gain a new appreciation for the origins of artificial light. . . . Zallen uses clear, often poetic, prose to focus on the labor required to bring illumination into the modern era, with a healthy respect for the sweat and suffering that process required.--Journal of Southern History American Lucifers is a methodologically ingenious, elegantly written labor history of the light-generating industries that preceded the electric light. . . . Its incisive, empathetic investigation into the daily lives of the workers who bore the costs of technological innovation makes it a unique, revelatory, and highly memorable study of the profoundly transformative effects of lighting technologies.--Journal of Interdisciplinary History Conventional histories of lighting celebrate technological progress, but Zallen's inspired and original study illuminates some darker corners of American history. . . . American Lucifers provides a powerful analysis through its copious information, but Zallen's imaginative and extensive use of primary sources makes it exceptionally captivating.--Ambix Zallen writes beautifully. He tells his story through vividly worded, richly researched tales. . . . To remind us . . . that every part of economic life connects us to the work of others, and that work can be very grim and very dark indeed.--The New England Quarterly As we face another great transition, from fossil fuels to alternative energies, Zallen's narrative is timely--echoing in the high human and environmental costs of dramas playing out in Nigerian oilfields and the smog of Indian cities.--David E. Nye, Nature An ambitious book. . . . handsomely produced, with illustrations and maps, and will appeal principally to history buffs.--Library Journal


Author Information

Jeremy Zallen is assistant professor of history at Lafayette College.

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