Cities of Light and Heat
Domesticating Gas and Electricity in Urban America
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press
Published:15th Apr '95
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£49.95(9780271013497)
Cities of Light and Heat takes us to Kansas City and Denver during the late nineteenth century when gas and electricity were introduced to these "instant cities" of the west. With rich detail, Mark Rose shows how the new technology spread during the next century from a few streets and businesses within the city limits to countless private homes in the suburbs. In Kansas City and Denver, as in most communities throughout the U.S., business executives, city leaders, and engineers acted as early promoters of the new technology. But by the early 1900s educators, home builders, architects, and salespersons were becoming increasingly important as gas and electric utilities and appliances reached more and more American homes. But these voices for the new technology brought with them their own social attitudes and cultural values. By mid-century, whether in the classroom or in advertisements, Americans were regularly encouraged to fit the new technology within prevailing notions of cleanliness, comfort, convenience, and gender.
Although in hindsight the spread of modern technology might seem inevitable to us, Rose shows how even the leaders of the nation's great gas and electric corporations with their vast production and distribution facilities were subject to geography, competing ideologies, urban politics, and even the choices of ordinary consumers. Rose thus locates the driving force behind the diffusion of technology in the neighborhoods, kitchens, and offices of the city. Cities of Light and Heat shows the importance of culture, politics, and urban growth in shaping technological change in the cities of North America.
“In Cities of Light and Heat Mark Rose has done for electric and gas systems what Sam Bass Warner did for streetcars. He demonstrates both that utility systems helped determine the character of developing cities and that the unique politics of each city determined the character of its utility system. Rose has tapped an uncommonly rich trove of archival sources from Denver and Kansas City to provide us with an uncommonly rich portrait of the men and women who shaped first the utility system, and then the profile of each city.”
—Ruth S. Cowan, Author of More Work for Mother
“Mark Rose’s tale of two cities captures the corporate culture of the age. He paints a wonderfully rich portrait of the relationships among the modern business corporation, its ‘agents of diffusion,’ and the mass of urban consumers. Using an interdisciplinary approach, he makes significant contributions to the history of cities and to the study of technology and culture.”
—Harold Platt
ISBN: 9780271024820
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
Weight: 367g
248 pages