A Pioneer of Connection
Recovering the Life and Work of Oliver Lodge
Graeme Gooday editor James Mussell editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Pittsburgh Press
Published:30th Sep '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Sir Oliver Lodge was a polymathic scientific figure who linked the Victorian Age with the Second World War, a reassuring figure of continuity across his long life and career. A physicist and spiritualist, inventor and educator, author and authority, he was one of the most famous public figures of British science in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A pioneer in the invention of wireless communication and later of radio broadcasting, he was foundational for twentieth-century media technology and a tireless communicator who wrote upon and debated many of the pressing interests of the day in the sciences and far beyond. Yet since his death, Lodge has been marginalized. By uncovering the many aspects of his life and career, and the changing dynamics of scientific authority in an era of specialization, contributors to this volume reveal how figures like Lodge fell out of view as technical experts came to dominate the public understanding of science in the second half of the twentieth century. They account for why he was so greatly cherished by many of his contemporaries, examine the reasons for his eclipse, and consider what Lodge, a century on, might teach us about taking a more integrated approach to key scientific controversies of the day.
This is a thorough, highly readable, and academically sophisticated account of the many facets of the career of Oliver Lodge. It affords a welcome corrective to Lodge’s marginalization, recovering his significance for a number of scientific fields as well as his importance for the development of civic universities and modern intellectual culture more generally." —Gowan Dawson, University of Leicester
"This volume is long overdue. Oliver Lodge is one of a number of Victorian/Edwardian physicists whose reputation during their own lifetimes has not been mirrored in the attention they have received from historians. Over the last few decades he has started to reemerge as the key figure he really was in historiographies of physics and scientific culture. This excellent collection will fulfill an important role in encouraging further work on him." —Iwan Morus, Aberystwyth University
ISBN: 9780822945956
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
336 pages