Hunt, Bruce J. (Author)
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.
...MoreReview Andrea Giuntini (April 2022) Review of "Imperial Science: Cable Telegraphy and Electrical Physics in the Victorian British Empire". Technology and Culture (pp. 576-577).
Book
Stewart Ash;
(2018)
The Cable King: The Life of John Pender
(/isis/citation/CBB763888073/)
Article
Tully, John;
(2009)
A Victorian Ecological Disaster: Imperialism, the Telegraph, and Gutta-Percha
(/isis/citation/CBB001030428/)
Article
D'Agostino, Salvo;
(2000)
On the difficulties of the transition from Maxwell's and Hertz's pure-field theories to Lorentz's electron
(/isis/citation/CBB000110635/)
Book
Forbes, Nancy;
Mahon, Basil;
(2014)
Faraday, Maxwell, and the Electromagnetic Field: How Two Men Revolutionized Physics
(/isis/citation/CBB001551506/)
Thesis
Cameron Lazaroff-Puck;
(2021)
What Theories Are Made Of: How Industry and Culture Shaped Maxwell's Theories of Electromagnetism
(/isis/citation/CBB411319578/)
Article
Silva, Cibelle Celestino;
(2007)
The Role of Models and Analogies in the Electromagnetic Theory: A Historical Case Study
(/isis/citation/CBB001032896/)
Book
Paul J. Nahin;
(2020)
Hot Molecules, Cold Electrons: From the Mathematics of Heat to the Development of the Trans-Atlantic Telegraph Cable
(/isis/citation/CBB042236017/)
Article
Bullock, Shawn Michael;
(2014)
The Pedagogical Implications of Maxwellian Electromagnetic Models: A Case Study from Victorian-Era Physics
(/isis/citation/CBB001500034/)
Article
Simone M. Müller;
(July 2016)
Essay: From Cabling the Atlantic to Wiring the World: A Review Essay on the 150th Anniversary of the Atlantic Telegraph Cable of 1866
(/isis/citation/CBB683288985/)
Chapter
Donatella Marmottini;
Raffaele Pisano;
(2017)
Nature-of-Science Teaching: notes on the Lagrangian Methods in Maxwell’s Electromagnetic Theory
(/isis/citation/CBB808838171/)
Chapter
Salvo D'Agostino;
(2016)
What is light? What is ether? An overwiew of Einstein’s problem on the abolition of ether and on its inheliminable presence in General Relativity
(/isis/citation/CBB336368332/)
Article
Roland Wenzlhuemer;
(October 2017)
The Telegraph and the Control of Material Movements: A Micro-Study about the Detachment of Communication from Transport
(/isis/citation/CBB485554370/)
Thesis
Zito, Fredrick Anthony;
(2002)
Maxwell, Hertz, and Marconi: Using the History of Science and Technology in Science Education
(/isis/citation/CBB001562545/)
Article
Arapostathis, Stathis;
Gooday, Graeme;
(2013)
Electrical Technoscience and Physics in Transition, 1880--1920
(/isis/citation/CBB001211898/)
Book
Kathleen Davidson;
(2017)
Photography, Natural History and the Nineteenth-Century Museum: Exchanging Views of Empire
(/isis/citation/CBB301363009/)
Book
Hunt, Bruce J.;
(2010)
Pursuing Power and Light: Technology and Physics from James Watt to Albert Einstein
(/isis/citation/CBB001020403/)
Article
Smith, Glenn S.;
(2013)
Faraday's First Dynamo: A Retrospective
(/isis/citation/CBB001320909/)
Book
Mr Anthony C. Cartwright;
(2015)
The British Pharmacopoeia, 1864 to 2014: Medicines, International Standards and the State
(/isis/citation/CBB390699552/)
Book
Stuart Anderson;
(2021)
Pharmacy and Professionalization in the British Empire, 1780-1970
(/isis/citation/CBB300441532/)
Book
Bennett, Brett M.;
Hodge, Joseph Morgan;
(2011)
Science and Empire: Knowledge and Networks of Science across the British Empire, 1800--1970
(/isis/citation/CBB001211176/)
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