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About the Author

David E. Nye (Ph.D. in American studies, University of Minnesota) is professor and chair at the Center for American Studies, Odense University, Denmark. Paul Brassley studied agricultural economics at the University of Newcastle and agricultural history at Oxford. He is senior lecturer in show more agricultural history and policy in the Seale-Hayne Faculty of the University of Plymouth. James Dickinson (Ph.D. in sociology, University of Toronto) teaches at Rider University. Jacob Wamberg (Ph.D. in art history, Copenhagen University) is assistant professor at the Institute of the History of Art, Aarhus University, Denmark. Tadeusz Rachwal is associate professor of English, University of Silesia, Poland. Stuart Kidd, until recently director of American Studies at the University of Reading, is now Warden of Bulmershe Hall. Christopher Bailey (B.A. in art history, University of East Anglia) is professor and head of the Department of Historical and Critical Studies, University of Northumbria. Stephen Mosley (Ph.D. in history, University of Lancaster) is a member of the history department, University of Birmingham, Westhill. Barbara Allen (architect, Columbia University; Ph.D. in Science and Technology Studies, RPI) holds the Contractors Educational Trust Fund Chair in Architecture at the University of Southwestern Louisiana. Mark Luccarelli (Ph.D. in American studies, University of Iowa) is associate professor in the Department of British and American Studies at the University of Oslo. Thomas Zeller (Ph.D. in history, Munich) is visiting assistant professor in the School of History, Technology and Society at Georgia Institute of Technology. He has also been a research associate in science and technology at the Deutsches Museum. Stephen Bending (Ph.D. in English, University of Cambridge) is a lecturer at the University of Southampton. Pia Maria Ahlback is a doctoral student and teacher at the department of English at Abo Akademi University, Turku, Finland. Peter Goin (M.F.A., University of Iowa) is professor of art in photography and video at the University of Nevada, Reno. Elizabeth Raymond (Ph.D. in American civilization, University of Pennsylvania) chairs the Department of History at the University of Nevada, Reno. show less

Includes the names: David Nye, ed. David E. Nye

Works by David E. Nye

America's Assembly Line (2013) 25 copies
Narratives and Spaces (1997) 18 copies
Seven Sublimes (2022) 5 copies

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This book covers the growth of electrical power in American society from around 1880 to 1940. It is not about the technology itself but about how that technology interacted with society. Nye covers the use of electricity in electric trolleys for transportation, in urban outdoor lighting, in industry, in urban homes, and out on the farms. He describes various several big exhibitions and fairs in some detail, because they used electricity in innovative ways, and because they promoted electricity as a key component of the ideal world they put on display.

There is a lot of fascinating detail here. Part of the argument of the book is that electricity didn't just replace the mechanical power of steam and flowing water. The greater flexibility of electric power allowed factories to take on new forms, and for manufacturing processes to be reorganized.

Another theme of the book was rather technical but still interesting. A challenge for power generation facilities still today is managing load fluctuations. Power companies would promote those uses of electricity that would help to reduce fluctuations. Electric trolley companies built or supported amusement parks at the ends of their lines, to increase traffic and electricity usage outside the normal business hours when load was greatest. Electric trolley companies would supply power to communities along their routes - that's another fun tidbit I picked up here.
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kukulaj | Apr 9, 2018 |
In a Review of this book, Peter Bacon Hales points to the contribution the book makes to an understanding of American culture by focusing on the ever expanding consumption of power, especially in "connecting the consumption culture to the energy systems that made its existence possible." (p. 725) In the 19th century, the US moved from human power, to water power, to seam and then to electricity. In the 20th, internal combustion engines took advantage of gasoline. In approaching the book, it is helpful to note that Hales sees the primary contribution of this work of synthesis in what it adds to our understanding of the 19th C.

Further investigation bears this viewpoint out. In his introduction, Nye begins by drawing our attention to the fact that America is today the largest consumer of energy in the world on a per capita basis. We could have gone another way, but we did not. Technology doesn't explain this, culture does. Why, for instance, have Americans built large interstate highway systems and other automobile-centric infrastructure. This was a choice which was made by people, not an inevitable result of automobile technology. As Thomas Hughes as taught us, large systems -- once they have grown to a certain size -- develop technological momentum. We cannot easily abandon the emphasis on the automobile because the system has momentum that limits our maneuver room. He seeks to show in this book how systems of energy gain and loose momentum in America. Muscle power and water dominated until the 1880s and then steam dominated until the 1920s. Beyond 1920, electricity and the combustion engine dominate. Given this periodization, Nye divides his study into three sections "Expansion," "Concentration" and "Dispersion."

Under "Expansion," he covers the early 19th century as the age of "Water and Industry". Up until the Civil War, the dominant system of energy in both North and South was water power.

Agricultural and industrial production were mutually reinforcing, and together they transformed the economy between 1800 and 1860. Factories made better agricultural equipment. Efficient farms released hands for urban employment. Growing cities provided farmers with an expanding base of customers. Canals and railways moved the harvest speedily and cheaply to market, The interdependence relied less on coal than on wood, and less on steam engines than on water wheels and canals. Sailing ships and canal boats were the most important form of transport until the middle of the nineteenth century. Renewable resources - wood for heat and water for power - remained the primary power sources. Though it is useful to contrast the Southern plantation systems with the Northern factories, the steam engine was less important in defining this difference than other cultural and geographic factors. (p. 43)

Nye turns first to a consideration of power systems in the North. The use of water power drove the building of mill downs around water falls. These towns were built on steep hillsides like those of the Brandywine Creek in DE. These mill villages were thoroughly shaped by the water power used to run the mills, and they were abandoned with the gradual ascendancy of steam power. Locating near the falls, the Du Pont factory near Wilmington thrived in the early 19th C retaining its rural character until later in the century with modest start up capital. Most mill towns were small, however, scattered along the many rivers and tributaries in New England. The textile mills of New England were different than these early mill towns in that they required major investment in physical plant. Some were highly successful, in particular those built by the Boston Associates, but many actually failed. Water power was plentiful and it was easy enough to develop excess capacity, such that most firms did not feel the need to adopt steam powered machinery before the Civil War. Well into the 1850s, manufactories remained small in the north and in many the workers successfully kept control over the shop floor. As Sean Wilentz pointed to the bastardization of craft in the shops of NYC, Nye sees this happening unevenly and claims that it was the growth in scale that sealed the fate of workers.

In the South, the large investment in slaves in combination with the logistical difficulties of using water power on a large scale due to the geography of the south conspired to lead the South not to invest in canals, railroads and city building. The plantation itself was a quasi-industrial center (here see Jefferson's Monticello for an excellent example). Pointing to the life story of Solomon Northrup, a free black who was kidnapped in 1841 in NYC and transported to New Orleans as a slave, he shows how resistant to technological innovation the Southern system was. An intelligent and educated black slave, his overseer laughed at his ideas for more efficient transportation -- slavery simply did not encourage maximizing production (p. 57). The economy of raw materials in the South was dependent on world cotton markets. The North bought cotton from the South and then sold the South finished goods.

It was, to repeat, water power that drove the developments in the North up until the Civil War. The Eerie Canal 1825 was symbolic of the achievement that linked urban markets with the hinterland. Later it would be the railroads, but they were still too expensive in the 1850s to be adopted by most farmers. It was along the Erie Canal that the towns of Schenectady, Utica, Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo grew up. The preponderance of canal transport in this period is interesting when contrasted with the later arrival of RRs. Canal travel in more "democratic" in that anyone can use the canal and there is no benefit to restricting the stops -- the RR maximized efficiency by restricting the number of stops. Yet this democratic mode of transportation fostered regional rather than national markets. Not until the age of steam powered RRs could a truly national market emerge.

As part of his section on "Concentration," he discusses "Cities of Steam" and "Power Incorporated." Beginning with "Cities of Steam," he describes overlapping power systems.

Steam power came to the city in two stages: first as transportation and later as manufacturing power. Both dramatically changed American landscapes. The steamboat transformed the Great Lakes and the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri and Hudson rivers into highways, which were connected into a national water transport network by canals. Starting in the 1840s, the railroad network extended this system further, accelerating the flow of people, goods, and information. (p. 71)

Adoption of steam power allowed manufacturing to arise in cities which did not have exploitable sources of water power. Worchester, Fall River and Providence were transformed into centers of manufacturing only with the introduction of steam powered machinery. The Railroad worked to annihilate time and space, drawing markets closer and changing people's perceptions at the same time. By the 1850s, railroad companies were already promoting the recreational uses of travel (personal life arising out of proletairianization seems premature in the antebellum world but maybe not ...) In contrast to the North, where steam power transformed cities into manufacturing center, the South chose low energy solutions. Steam power, though available to the South, retained its rural character. A community of skilled mechanics did not evolve in the South to provide the self-reinforcing drive for innovation.

Turning to the use of coal as fuel, Nye tracks the development of coal mining in Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh, near coal supplies, was early transformed to a center of railroads and heavy industry. But the adoption of coal as a fuel was uneven. Many railroads and steam boats used wood well into the middle of the century and manufacturers were slow to move to coal-fueled steam power into the 1850s. The passage to coal-fueled steam was the passage that marked the American entry into the world of dark satanic mills that Jefferson had sought to avoid. Coal mines were dangerous, steam powered river boats suffered many catastrophes in the 1830s and 40s, and steam boilers caused major explosions in NYC and Hartford, CT in the 1850s. Yet, the American society of the time was convinced that these were acts of god not bad management. Indeed, the dangerous mines were often a test of local bravado as Anthony Wallace has shown. The remarkable resistance to limitations on steam power is best seen inside this cultural matrix. The shift that occurred at mid century can be seen in the language of the country. Early in the century, agricultural metaphors for work prevailed and then later we started talking in the language of steam (p. 90).

The apotheosis of steam power occurs at the Centennial Exhibition in 1876 (Philadelphia). Here the huge Corliss steam engine powered the exhibits. The exhibit prefigured the networked city that would spread across the continent in the next several decades. It also increasingly put families of the middling sort at the mercy of a rising skilled class of blue collar workers who maintained the networked city. Life for the middle class which did benefit from the networked city became more complicated. The networked city featured gas lighting and better sanitation for the better off. The underside was darker, since this networked city did not share its benefits with all. Women in particular bore the brunt of this uneven development in cities, as they struggled to provide for their families' survival. And on the "frontier" the benefits of the networked city were also rarely felt, though the impact of the steam power system was increasingly felt in other ways.

Turning next to "Power Incorporated," Nye considers the rise of the corporate form of organization in the context of steam power.

Was a homesteading farmer on the high plains in 1870 really a part of the steam-powered economy? What did he have to do with corporations in Chicago or New York? His sparsely furnished sod hut, as revealed in old photographs, appears so primitive that to say that it was in some sense "industrial" seems absurd. Nevertheless, the homestead was very much part of a high-energy society. The steel plow the farmer used to break the plains, the barbed wire that fenced his cattle, and his metal tools were industrial products, as was the camera that was used to make a picture of his house. This farmer produced cash crops for a national market that was accessible only by railroad. His sod hut was only temporary shelter to be used until he had time to erect a better house, generally with a balloon frame of pre-cut wood hammered together with factory-produced nails. Gone were the heavy beams and the time-consuming work of making mortice-and-tenon joints. The homesteader was not a peasant; he was a specialized farmer deeply enmeshed in the capitalist system. He was a speculator in land and a consumer linked to distant markets. Without a system of steam-powered transportation, a farm concentrating on a few products would not have made economic sense. The farmer's existence was underwritten by institutions that were all but invisible where he lived. Chief among these was the corporation. How had corporations emerged, and how were they related to the power system? (p. 104)

This sets the stage for the problem. Early industrialization had proceeded primarily via family and local networks. The incorporation laws passed by most states by the time of the Civil War, gave legal life to the corporate form. Businesses that focused on infrastructure (such as canals, railroads, steam ships, telegraph companies, mines and steel mills) all took advantage of the corporate form as a way of raising the requisite capital, while protecting the personal fortunes of investors. The increase in the scale of these enterprises and the increased prestige of the military form of organizational hierarchy, lead to the changes in the way these corporate entities behaved. This change, however, took time. Railroads resisted the use of telegraph technology for more than a decade, opting to do things "by the book" and using published schedules.

And what was happening at this time on the labor front? Both indenture and apprenticeship had largely died out by the 1840s, thereby freeing up labor to seek its own avenues of employment. Management in the corporate form was also freed from the constraints of the family firm, freed to allow for the employment of managers who would run the business on a more efficient basis than the old family proprietors. Yet the corporate form only worked when there were efficiencies to scale either in production or in distribution. The example of iron stove manufacture is cited here, as the opening up of canals in the 1820s made fuel and iron readily available in upstate NY where the production of cast iron stoves boomed from 1835-1860. At the same time the market for stoves provided further incentive as people moved westward. The same thing happened with the plow and reaper manufacturing sector, as migrants moved to the Ohio Valley in the west the infrastructure that made manufacture of these implements possible enabled the companies producing them to do so efficiently and at a profit. Cyrus McCormick took advantage of the canals and railroads in Chicago to sell his combines to the western market. Shifting focus to the western market, he describes the rapidity with which the American expropriated Indian lands and then brought them under cultivation.

Nye points to the increasing efficiency of agriculture as a precursor to the assembly line of Henry Ford. By the early 20th C farm production was highly mechanized. In the post-Civil War era, meat packing became a major industry as well. Mechanized canning of food also proceeded apace. First to feed soldiers, then to feed cowboys, mechanized food preservation boomed in the latter half of the 19th Century. The handicraft of canning was transformed into an industrial process at the same time as the American tobacco company adopted the Bonsack machine to produce a vast quantity of cigarettes. The progress in food preservation was not an unalloyed good for farmers, however, as the economic slowdown of the late 19th C was to show. The consolidation of oil wholesaling and distribution under Standard Oil allowed for greater efficiencies but also lead to a careless attitude toward the environment, with oil being so inexpensive that there was no financial incentive to protect the environment from spills. Overall, however, Nye argues that the weakness of countertrends (labor agitations) allowed for greater efficiency in contrast with Europe where the weaker positions of corporations necessitated the slowing of the division of labor and the continuation of the craft tradition of the guild system.
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mdobe | Jul 24, 2011 |
I wish that I'd read this a few years ago before I started teaching STS--that's my main thought. This is a wonderful primer and in-depth discussion on matters and thoughts related to technologies and their development alongside society (global, but with a focus on America). While I've already got a strong background in STS (Science and Technology in Society), this was still a worthwhile read. It takes the familiar and forces serious consideration, all the while giving readers time to think instead of attempting to argue a particular viewpoint. It is well-written, engaging, and thoughtful.

If you're remotely interested in the way that technology (and humanity's perception of technology) has shaped and interacted with the building of our society and culture, I'd recommend it highly. Even if you just want an interesting nonfiction read that you can pick up in fits and starts, this is worthwhile and engaging. If you're looking for something to learn from and think about that applies to your every day life, this is a good choice.
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whitewavedarling | 1 other review | Mar 17, 2008 |
"CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN SOCIETY is comprehensive, yet gracefully written. It is both exciting and easy to use" - Niels Bjerre-Poulsen, Ph.D. Associate professor, Dept. of English, Copenhagen Business school. (From the back cover).
 
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paulb | Dec 2, 2006 |

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