World Projects: Global Information before World War I: Electronic Mediations, cartea 45
Autor Markus Krajewski Traducere de Charles Marcrum IIen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2015
Markus Krajewski is emerging as a leading scholar in the field of media archaeology, which seeks to trace cultural history through the media networks that enable and structure it. In World Projects he opens a new portal into the history of globalization by examining several large-scale projects that, at the beginning of the twentieth century, shared a grand yet unachievable goal: bringing order to the world.
Drawing from a broad array of archival materials, Krajewski reveals how expanding commercial relations, growing international scientific agreements, and an imperial monopolization of the political realm spawned ambitious global projects. World Projects contends that the late nineteenth-century networks of cables, routes, and shipping lines—of junctions, crossovers, and transfers—merged into a “multimedia system” that was a prerequisite for conceiving a world project. As examples, he presents the work of three big-thinking “plansmiths,” each of whose work mediates between two discursive fields: the chemist and natural philosopher Wilhelm Ostwald, who spent years promoting a “world auxiliary language” and a world currency; the self-taught “engineer” and self-anointed authority on science and technology Franz Maria Feldhaus, who labored to produce an all-encompassing “world history of technology”; and Walther Rathenau, who put economics to the service of politics and quickly transformed the German economy.
With a keen eye for the outlandish as well as the outsized, Krajewski shows how media, technological structures, and naked human ambition paved the way for global-scale ventures that together created the first “world wide web.”
Drawing from a broad array of archival materials, Krajewski reveals how expanding commercial relations, growing international scientific agreements, and an imperial monopolization of the political realm spawned ambitious global projects. World Projects contends that the late nineteenth-century networks of cables, routes, and shipping lines—of junctions, crossovers, and transfers—merged into a “multimedia system” that was a prerequisite for conceiving a world project. As examples, he presents the work of three big-thinking “plansmiths,” each of whose work mediates between two discursive fields: the chemist and natural philosopher Wilhelm Ostwald, who spent years promoting a “world auxiliary language” and a world currency; the self-taught “engineer” and self-anointed authority on science and technology Franz Maria Feldhaus, who labored to produce an all-encompassing “world history of technology”; and Walther Rathenau, who put economics to the service of politics and quickly transformed the German economy.
With a keen eye for the outlandish as well as the outsized, Krajewski shows how media, technological structures, and naked human ambition paved the way for global-scale ventures that together created the first “world wide web.”
Din seria Electronic Mediations
- Preț: 154.56 lei
- Preț: 123.92 lei
- Preț: 154.56 lei
- Preț: 170.61 lei
- 20% Preț: 105.75 lei
- Preț: 109.88 lei
- Preț: 142.21 lei
- Preț: 154.56 lei
- Preț: 131.49 lei
- Preț: 178.87 lei
- Preț: 169.34 lei
- Preț: 252.45 lei
- Preț: 169.70 lei
- Preț: 177.27 lei
- Preț: 177.59 lei
- Preț: 224.90 lei
- Preț: 215.61 lei
- Preț: 194.88 lei
- Preț: 185.38 lei
- Preț: 215.42 lei
- 20% Preț: 177.26 lei
- 20% Preț: 185.60 lei
- Preț: 221.28 lei
- Preț: 222.40 lei
- 20% Preț: 151.52 lei
- Preț: 223.73 lei
- Preț: 174.53 lei
- Preț: 210.72 lei
- Preț: 196.21 lei
- Preț: 216.53 lei
- 26% Preț: 126.59 lei
- Preț: 234.73 lei
- 27% Preț: 103.25 lei
- 14% Preț: 93.45 lei
- 7% Preț: 116.43 lei
- 33% Preț: 113.75 lei
- 26% Preț: 115.34 lei
- 18% Preț: 153.20 lei
- 26% Preț: 126.41 lei
- Preț: 211.34 lei
- 13% Preț: 141.35 lei
- 17% Preț: 155.68 lei
- 32% Preț: 497.07 lei
- 9% Preț: 662.08 lei
- 20% Preț: 723.16 lei
- 26% Preț: 115.34 lei
Preț: 138.23 lei
Preț vechi: 170.98 lei
-19% Nou
Puncte Express: 207
Preț estimativ în valută:
26.45€ • 27.48$ • 21.97£
26.45€ • 27.48$ • 21.97£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780816683512
ISBN-10: 0816683514
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: 17
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Electronic Mediations
ISBN-10: 0816683514
Pagini: 328
Ilustrații: 17
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.4 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Minnesota Press
Colecția Univ Of Minnesota Press
Seria Electronic Mediations
Notă biografică
Markus Krajewski is professor of media history and theory at the University of Basel, Switzerland. He is the author of Paper Machines: About Cards and Catalogs, 1548 –1929.
Charles Marcrum II is a translator of nonfiction and literary works. He earned an AM degree in Germanic languages and literatures from Harvard University.
Cuprins
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. The World around 1900
2. The Unity of Diversity: Wilhelm Ostwald’s World Formations
3. World History of Technology: Dr. Franz Maria Feldhaus
4. Systems Economy: Walther Rathenau, Man of the World
5. As for the Rest: In Search of the World’s Remains
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. The World around 1900
2. The Unity of Diversity: Wilhelm Ostwald’s World Formations
3. World History of Technology: Dr. Franz Maria Feldhaus
4. Systems Economy: Walther Rathenau, Man of the World
5. As for the Rest: In Search of the World’s Remains
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
"This is a fascinating—and very entertaining—study. It weaves a tapestry of early technological globalization made up of projects, pipe dreams, and propaganda. There is on the part of the author a noticeable affection for these world infatuations, but there is also the necessary amount of gentle mockery when they become too unworldly."—Geoffrey Winthrop-Young, University of British Columbia
"World Projects carves out a much needed space for human involvement in networked systems and, by doing so, comments on our own struggles for agency within our highly “globalized” networks today."—Los Angeles Review of Books
"Always informative and has true worth for researchers and media archeologists."—Neural
"Always informative and has true worth for researchers and media archeologists."—Neural