Cover image for Connected : How Trains, Genes, Pineapples, Piano Keys, and a Few Disasters Transformed Americans at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century.
Connected : How Trains, Genes, Pineapples, Piano Keys, and a Few Disasters Transformed Americans at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century.
Title:
Connected : How Trains, Genes, Pineapples, Piano Keys, and a Few Disasters Transformed Americans at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century.
Author:
Cassedy, Steven.
ISBN:
9780804788410
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (235 pages)
Contents:
Copyright -- Title Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- A Note on Usage -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Part I: Body and Mind -- 1. "To Push Back the Shadow upon the Dial of Time": The Astonishing New Facts of Life and Death -- 2. The Biological Self -- 3. Sex O'Clock in America -- 4. The Neurophysiological Mind-or Not -- Part II: The New Physical World -- 5. The Network of Spatialized Time -- 6. The Networked House and Home -- 7. The Globalized Consumer Network: From Pineapples to Turkey Red Cigarettes to the Bunny Hug -- Part III: The Secular, Ecumenical Collective -- 8. Race Goes Scientific, Then Transnational -- 9. Religion Goes Worldly, Ecumenical, and Collective -- 10. Citizen, Community, State -- Conclusion: Who You Are -- Notes and Index -- Notes -- Index.
Abstract:
Between the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth, Americans underwent a dramatic transformation in self-conception: having formerly lived as individuals or members of small communities, they now found themselves living in networks, which arose out of scientific and technological innovations. There were transportation and communication networks. There was the network of the globalized marketplace, which brought into the American home exotic goods previously affordable to only a few. There was the network of standard time, which bound together all but the most rural Americans. There was the public health movement, which joined individuals to their fellow citizens by making everyone responsible for the health of everyone else. There were social networks that joined individuals to their fellows at the municipal, state, national, and global levels. Previous histories of this era focus on alienation and dislocation that new technologies caused. This book shows that American individuals in this era were more connected to their fellow citizens than ever-but by bonds that were distinctly modern.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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