Article ID: CBB335126354

Empire-Laden Theory: The Technological and Colonial Roots of Maxwell’s Theories of Electromagnetism (2024)

unapi

James Clerk Maxwell’s theories of electromagnetism are distinctively Victorian products. Analysis of his often ignored theory of electric absorption and the Maxwellians’ “leaky condenser” reveals that critical details of these theories were shaped by Victorian electrical technology, namely capacitors and undersea telegraphy. Between appearances in his “Dynamical Theory” and Treatise, Maxwell’s theory of electric absorption evolved. It shifted his understanding of electrical action in the dielectric, bolstered central concepts in his broader electromagnetic theories, provided hope for a beleaguered experimental program to confirm his electromagnetic theory of light, and even led him to distort his expression for Ohm’s law. Simultaneously, the technological influences behind his theories come with their own histories. Maxwell draws heavily upon the testimony of cable engineer Fleeming Jenkin to the Joint Committee on the Construction of Submarine Telegraphs, formed to rescue the industry after multiple failed attempts to lay an Atlantic cable. Maxwell’s reliance on this testimony given to this committee imprints the financial and imperial ambition that initially spurred these cables’ construction onto his electromagnetic theories. A substance discussed in this testimony, gutta-percha, also connects Maxwell’s theory to the extractive global trade of this resource. The success of this committee in reforming the telegraph industry links Maxwell’s theories to the colonial, economic, and ecological fallout of the rapid global expansion of Britain’s undersea telegraph network.

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Authors & Contributors
Shahvar, Soli
Alexander, Jennifer Karns
Bokulich, Alisa
Bordoni, Stefano
Cookson, Gillian
D'Agostino, Salvatore
Journals
Iranian Studies
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Annalen der Physik
British Journal for the History of Science
British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
Publishers
Cambridge University Press
University of Minnesota
Ashgate
Firenze University Press
Prometheus Books
University of California, Los Angeles
Concepts
Electromagnetism
Physics
Science and technology, relationships
Technology
Electricity; magnetism
Communication technology
People
Maxwell, James Clerk
Faraday, Michael
Lorentz, Hendrik Antoon
Boole, George
Einstein, Albert
Helmholtz, Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
Places
Great Britain
India
Persia (Iran)
Tuscany (Italy)
Scotland
England
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