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Network Nation
Inventing American Telecommunications
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2010
About this book
Network Nation places the history of telecommunications within the broader context of American politics, business, and discourse. This engrossing and provocative book persuades us of the critical role of political economy in the development of new technologies and their implementation.
Reviews
Could it be that Americans actually like communications monopolists? Do we want dominant firms to run our world? Richard R. John’s splendid book helps to answer that question by telling us just where this American affection for info-monopoly came from. John has produced a detailed study of the grand-daddies of it all: AT&T and Western Union, the first great info-monopolists, whose role in communications history is similar to that of the Allosaurus and the T. rex in the history of the animal kingdom. A work of careful history based on archival research, Network Nation begins with Samuel Morse’s construction of the first electric telegraph line in 1844 and concludes with the establishment of AT&T (or Bell, a term that can be used interchangeably with AT&T) as America’s regulated telephone monopoly… What Network Nation does deliver is a nuanced answer to the basic question, why monopoly?
-- Tim Wu New Republic
-- Tim Wu New Republic
This is a richly detailed and readable book that fills an important gap in the history of communication networks. It definitively debunks palaver about mass communications as an autonomous agent of change, emphasizing how Americans constructed the telegraph and the telephone through a political process of continual negotiation and redefinition.
-- David E. Nye American Historical Review
-- David E. Nye American Historical Review
[An] exceptional new history of American communications technologies from 1840 to 1920.
-- Steven W. Usselman Business History Review
-- Steven W. Usselman Business History Review
This is a valuable book on the technological and economic trends that impacted the popularization of the telephone, one of the most profoundly significant inventions in the record of humanity. To understand the history of American telecommunications is to attend to the political economies at the time technological innovation occurred. John brilliantly articulates this context. Shifting municipal and federal sensibilities always shaped the diffusion of technologies, even in times where strong federal governmental oversight did not yet exist. The threat of federal and municipal government ownership of telecommunication systems was real, as seen in the case of the Bell system (and its failure).
-- Jim Hahn Library Journal
-- Jim Hahn Library Journal
In a compact, learned-yet-lucid, and deeply informed book spanning roughly eight decades, Richard R. John provides an engrossing history of the emergence of telecommunication networks in the United States.
-- David A. Hounshell, Carnegie Mellon University
-- David A. Hounshell, Carnegie Mellon University
Network Nation is an extraordinary feat of scholarly imagination. Richard John’s sweeping history of the telecommunications industry reveals as much about the development of the American state and of the culture of technology as about the rise of a troubled monopoly. Like Alfred Chandler’s The Visible Hand, it is one of few institutional studies that anyone with a serious interest in U.S. history should read.
-- Michael Kazin, author of A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan
-- Michael Kazin, author of A Godly Hero: The Life of William Jennings Bryan
The innovators who built America’s telecommunication networks created more than new devices. With elegant prose and exhaustive research, Richard R. John’s eagerly awaited masterwork shows how business and governmental institutions shaped the first century of the telegraph and the telephone.
-- Pamela Walker Laird, author of Pull: Networking and Success since Benjamin Franklin
-- Pamela Walker Laird, author of Pull: Networking and Success since Benjamin Franklin
A foundational business history that will be an essential component of what well-educated Americans need to know about their society.
-- Richard White, Stanford University
-- Richard White, Stanford University
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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List of Illustrations and Tables
vii -
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Introduction: Inventing American Telecommunications
1 -
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1. Making a Neighborhood of a Nation
5 -
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2. Professor Morse’s Lightning
24 -
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3. Antimonopoly
65 -
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4. The New Postalic Dispensation
114 -
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5. Rich Man’s Mail
156 -
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6. The Talking Telegraph
200 -
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7. Telephomania
238 -
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8. Second Nature
269 -
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9. Gray Wolves
311 -
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10. Universal Ser vice
340 -
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11. One Great Medium?
370 -
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Epilogue: The Technical Millennium
407 -
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Chronology of American Telecommunications
415 -
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Notes
425 -
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Acknowledgments
501 -
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Index
505
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
September 1, 2010
eBook ISBN:
9780674056527
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
528
eBook ISBN:
9780674056527
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;