The Industrial Revolutionaries: The Creators of the Modern World 1776 - 1914

Author:   Gavin Weightman
Publisher:   Atlantic Books
Edition:   Main - Print on Demand
ISBN:  

9781843545859


Pages:   432
Publication Date:   01 April 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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The Industrial Revolutionaries: The Creators of the Modern World 1776 - 1914


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Author:   Gavin Weightman
Publisher:   Atlantic Books
Imprint:   Atlantic Books
Edition:   Main - Print on Demand
Dimensions:   Width: 13.00cm , Height: 3.10cm , Length: 19.60cm
Weight:   0.414kg
ISBN:  

9781843545859


ISBN 10:   1843545853
Pages:   432
Publication Date:   01 April 2008
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

* 'Ambitious... clear-sighted... fascinating... Instead of simply replacing one set of triumphalist myths with an alternative one, Weightman practises real history.' - Brian Morton, Sunday Herald * 'Weightman paints a subtle and varied picture... [he] has managed the difficult task of producing an account of the industrialising world that gives proper honour to his chosen grand narrative as well as to the hundreds of little local stories that both nourish and complicate it.' - Kathryn Hughes, Guardian * 'It is one of the pleasures of Weightman's book to see how technology rose above nationality... the interconnectedness of this world of invention and technology is extraordinary... Wonderful.' - Judith Flanders, Sunday Telegraph * 'In this lively study, there is little room for the dry academic prose that so often makes economic histories a painful reading experience. Instead, we have a wealth of vivid portraits of figures from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries... Excellent.' - Leo McKinstry, Literary Review


Ambitious... clear-sighted... fascinating... Instead of simply replacing one set of triumphalist myths with an alternative one, Weightman practises real history. -- Brian Morton * Sunday Herald * Weightman paints a subtle and varied picture... [he] has managed the difficult task of producing an account of the industrialising world that gives proper honour to his chosen grand narrative as well as to the hundreds of little local stories that both nourish and complicate it. -- Kathryn Hughes * Guardian * It is one of the pleasures of Weightman's book to see how technology rose above nationality... the interconnectedness of this world of invention and technology is extraordinary... Wonderful. -- Judith Flanders * Sunday Telegraph * In this lively study, there is little room for the dry academic prose that so often makes economic histories a painful reading experience. Instead, we have a wealth of vivid portraits of figures from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries... Excellent. -- Leo McKinstry * Literary Review *


Breezy social history of the inventors and entrepreneurs who transformed society with innovations in infrastructure and technology.Weightman (London's Thames, 2005, etc.) seeks to reverse the popular notion of the Industrial Revolution as driven by some impersonal force. His collection of individual life stories spans from the first major changes in manufacturing processes and iron smelting in 18th-century England to the growth of indigenous industries in Germany, Japan, France and the United States, which had eclipsed Britain's supremacy by 1914. As the initially dominant innovator, England teemed with foreign spies maneuvering to uncover the secrets of textile spinning machines. British engineers found lucrative opportunities abroad as they shared expertise in canal building, steam railway, bridge and lighthouse construction. Weightman emphasizes the importance of this British expertise for creating infrastructure and driving innovation in both America and Japan, which also benefited from continental influences. French immigrant E.I. du Pont, fleeing from the Revolution, initiated the development of gunpowder in the United States, and American Samuel F.B. Morse, though he claimed to be the sole inventor of the electric telegraph, in fact built on European discoveries. Many of the worldwide pioneers who furthered technology had no background in engineering, notes the author, but these entrepreneurs partnered with the right technical minds to further their visions. Britain was overtaken as industrial leader in the second stage of the Industrial Revolution, as the age of steel, oil and electricity favored rapidly growing nations such as the United States and Germany. Weightman crams his narrative with anecdotes, such as the Russian fleet, sailing around Africa en route to war with Japan in 1904, taking time out for inland forays to acquire an exotic menagerie including a boa constrictor which apparently developed a taste for vodka. This fondness for excessive detail results in the book's few memorable individuals getting lost among an army of artisans. Like cotton candy - tasty yet somehow insubstantial. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Gavin Weightman is social historian based in London. His books include the best-selling London River: A History of the Thames, The Frozen Water Trade, an account of the American natural ice industry, and most recently a history of wireless, Signor Marconi's Magic Box.

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