220 likes | 320 Views
Explore the profound social impact of electrification in America during the late 19th to early 20th centuries, as detailed by David Nye's research. Delve into how electrification transformed society, institutions, and cultural perceptions. Gain insights into the electrification process worldwide, drawing comparisons between the American and European models. Discover the diverse perspectives held by intellectuals, engineers, businesspeople, and the general public regarding the advent of electricity.
E N D
Exploring Electrical Technology Perspectives on Social Impact of Electrification in America by David Nye based on Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology 1880-1940
The Great White Way(Nye’s Ch 2 of Electrifying America) • Identity & Influence • Referred originally to N.Y.’s Broadway, when lit with electrified signage between Madison & Herald Square • Widely emulated in other cities • Spurred usage of electricity by other institutions w/benefits & dangers • Challenged church to communicate its message into contemporary culture • Todays analog: WWW and Internet?
Great White Way: Other focal points that exemplified the same spirit • Expo’s: 1876-1915; 1933-39 (when the World’s Fair was active) • Resulted in a permanent increase in the load for electrical utilities • Offered most effective way to reach a large audience • Provided a model for community transformation
Great White Way: Other focal points that exemplified the same spirit • Expo’s • Went beyond utilitarian value to lend prestige & represent progress symbolically • Exemplified Christianity, science & progress • Enabled theatrics, special effects and signage for advertising
Great White Way: Other focal points that exemplified the same spirit • Electric Tower*: symbolized electricity & electrificat’n itself • A miniaturized lighted replica of Niagra Falls as source of its power • Placement of lights • Emphasized architectural details • Symbolized man’s control over nature • Suggested visibility, yet intangibility of electricity itself *Nye page 45
Great White Way • Promoted new uses of light • Accent beauty & hide eyesores • At Niagra Falls • Highlighted its natural splendor • Left bleak brick bldgs nearby in the dark • Added color at nighttime • Buildings & streets in the city • Emphasized impressive features • Kept eyesores in poor areas blank • Capitol & White House Bldgs took advantage
Great White Way • New usages of electric light • Held observers spellbound & awestruck by its brilliance • Moved beyond functional necessity • Imitations of nature became popular • False aurora borealis • Creation of the earth simulation • Buildings were lit as a spectacle for publicity • As a symbol of corporate power • As a permanent ad • Became a text without words • 1905 Times Square became New Year’s event • Instrument of cultural expression; symbolic validation of urban industrial order
Great White Way • Treatment by Poet’s & Artists • Viewpoints differed • Edward Hungerford rhapsodized it • Mumford & Pound had it cause a personal epiphony • Lewis Eilshemius saw it as a monster • Cather & Brook either criticized or theologized it • Lindsay was ambivalent
Great White Way • Practical benefit for artists: could now see their own colors well enough without sunlight
Great White Way • The City from Greenwich Village • An important piece of artwork • Depicts the Great White Way dominating the background • Neighborhood built on human scale occupies foreground • Illustrates new intrusive, dominant place electrified lighting came to have in lives of city dwellers
What Was Electricity?(Nye’s Ch 4 of Electrifying America) • Process of electrification throughout world nations • Similarities: all shaped by complex, social, political, technical ideological interactions • Differences: somewhat typified by the USA versus European model
What Was Electricity? • Electrification in the USA • Initially fragmented, individualized, sporadic in operation, distributed by DC systems locally • Later distributed by AC, privately funded by banks, had to be profitable, became government regulated
What Was Electricity? • Electrification in Europe • Publicly funded & controlled by government • Lost money, yet lighted homes more quickly than in the USA
What Was Electricity? • Social groups identified by Nye • American Intellectuals • General public • Engineers • Business people
What Was Electricity? • American Intellectuals • Included Jackson Lear’s anti-modernists & Richard Hofstadter’s Mugwumps • Viewed electricity as • a sign of modernity • Means of subjection, destruction and social control
What Was Electricity? • General public • Including urban middle class, working class & rural people • Saw electricity as • Item of consumption, conspicuous clothing* and signage • Means of better health** • Symbol of utopian ideals • Metaphor for mental power, psychic energy and sexual attraction *Nye page 148; ** Nye page 154
What Was Electricity? • Engineers • New group of professionals • Considered part of a tech. elite • Perspective on electricity • Instrument for rationality & social reform • Embraced new values based on mathematical versus cut and try approach to solving technical problems
What Was Electricity? • Engineers’ perspective • A view of God as the Great Electrician • A view of themselves as cultural transformers & agents of corporate capitalism • Engineers as viewed by others • Awed for their achievements by public: bridges, dams, power stations, etc. • Negatively by anti-modernists who opposed them
What Was Electricity? • Business people • Most organized & self-conscious • Influenced by several factors • Periodicals: Century, Success & Magazine of Wall Street • Duopoly of GE and Westinghouse • Government regulation of & competition between public utilities • Saw electricity as • A tool for making money • A commodity rather than as a public service
What Was Electricity? • Emerged as private electrical utilities with state regulation • Pro: facilitated growth to meet the demand of human needs & enabled funding from private enterprise • Con: sometimes became corrupt or overlooked environmental & other public interests for sake of profit
What Was Electricity? • Conclusion: In accord with the American ideal of free enterprise and a capitalistic economy, competition between private electrical utilities seems good, but experience also shows the need for government regulation to balance competing public interests and maintain necessary standards for protection.