325:questions:week_6_questions_comments-325_19
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
325:questions:week_6_questions_comments-325_19 [2019/10/02 17:57] – [Chapter 4, What was Electricity? 138-142, 182-184] 76.78.225.146 | 325:questions:week_6_questions_comments-325_19 [2019/11/21 16:18] (current) – 192.65.245.79 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
====== Nye, 29-132, 138-142, 182-184, 287-291, 304-307, 314-317, 322-338 ====== | ====== Nye, 29-132, 138-142, 182-184, 287-291, 304-307, 314-317, 322-338 ====== | ||
- | ==== Chapter | + | ==== Chapter |
+ | **Nye’s chapter “The Great White Way” discusses the early days of electric lights, from their theatrical antecedents to their use as spectacle in celebration and advertisement.** The term “Great White Way” refers to the use of bright carbon and later incandescent-based street lights that illuminate city paths such as New York’s Broadway and California’s San Francisco. Early, less utilitarian versions of electric lights had been used slightly earlier than the invention of Edison’s electric lights. (29-30) **This is not the only technology or phenomenon that theaters have pioneered, as early brands of makeup also got their start on the stage before becoming commercially-sold goods.** **During these years, electricity was seen as novelty rather than utility,** as common with many of Edison’s inventions, including elements of the phonograph systems that would later become key to the social popularity of playable and record-able sound. In the early twentieth-century, | ||
+ | This chapter focused on the early stages of electric lights. I found it interesting, | ||
- | ==== Chapter | + | This was a very interesting chapter for me becuase I knew that lights would be used for advertising, |
+ | |||
+ | In the chapter “The Great White Way” in Nye’s “Electrifying America” he explains the evolution of electric lighting in the early decades of its presence in American life. From being a spectacle that attracts tourists to fairs and expositions to advertisements and attractions constantly lit in American urban cities. Through this reading the reader grasps all that went into these inventions and developments that are so often overlooked. Typically when learning about electric lighting we are just told that Edison invented the light bulb and sometimes told about the electric system but this exposes readers to the evolution that brings us to today' | ||
+ | |||
+ | In chapter one of the book " | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Chapter | ||
+ | |||
+ | I thought it was interesting that the h**undreds of American Street Railways built were mostly private ventures for those private investors** that helped bring along the development of the “Old Horsecar Lines.” These investors were the ones that mainly focused on Real Estate. An example of someone doing something for a city, however, Henry M. Whitney would put six streetcar companies together to “monopolize” Boston public transit, which in turn would stimulate the sales of the property that he owned that was along a boulevard adjacent to Brookline. – Hunter Dykhuis | ||
+ | |||
+ | Transportation impacts every facet of life. In Crosstown Transfer, Nye addresses how transportation and electricity are related. I'd analyzed how streetcars impacted workers, specifically the beginnings of more rigid zoning laws, but Nye places the streetcar under a social analysis that required looking at looking beyond the reason for invention and the immediate impact of the car itself. **One of the most interesting ideas that the streetcar gave power to the working class. When going out on strike, the working class held an immediate and tangible effect on the middle-class patronages of electric cars. Without the streetcar running, middle-class men could not commute from the suburbs to the city.** -K.Eastridge | ||
- | I thought it was interesting that the hundreds of American Street Railways built were mostly private ventures for those private investors that helped bring along the development of the “Old Horsecar Lines.” These investors were the ones that mainly focused on Real Estate. An example of someone doing something for a city, however, Henry M. Whitney would put six streetcar companies together to “monopolize” Boston public transit, which in turn would stimulate the sales of the property that he owned that was along a boulevard adjacent to Brookline. – Hunter Dykhuis | ||
==== Chapter 4, What was Electricity? | ==== Chapter 4, What was Electricity? | ||
- | In the early twentieth century, contained electricity was a revolutionary invention that I believe heavily influenced and strengthened American capitalism. Unlike countries in Europe, ”Americans treated electrification as a business rather than a social service.” (140-141) | + | In the early twentieth century, contained electricity was a revolutionary invention that I believe heavily influenced and strengthened American capitalism. |
- | The early days of electricity | + | Electricity was seen as a commodity for all people to have but businesses did not know how to manage it. Should it be sold privately or should it be publicly sold to everyone. Making electricity privately sold caused issues of using different voltages and and alternating currents. **The idea of electricity |
- | Do we in the 21st century still hold the notion that the more electric | + | In response to Nate, I also wonder at what point electric |
- | In response to Nate, I also wonder at what point electric vehicles | + | **Private |
+ | It's quite astonishing to think about the ways such a common commodity that electricity is today was once such a symbol of wealth and status. Having electricity at the turn of the 20th meant a wide variety of things about you socially. Having electricity in your neighborhood meant you lived in a classy and upscale area. Having electricity running in your own home meant you were living it up with the big shots. Its also worth noting that it didn't take long for a wide variety of upstart companies to take advantage of harvesting this new form of power, which is likely something we will see again if alternative forms of energy such as solar power ever become widespread. - Michael Dietrich | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Nye is telling the early beginnings of American electricity and how industries adopted certain practices.The thought of having electricity companies government owned could of made sense when America was smaller in the 1880s, and the correct choice for private utility companies was made. **“Because electrification was privately funded it had to make a profit (Nye 140)” the statement is very simple but makes a lot of sense, businesses are going to do what they need to do to make money**. -John Liberty | ||
+ | |||
+ | It's quite interesting reading how they thought electricity worked, as well as they came into what is more like modern day electricity. -Lauren Blouch | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | **Electricity started out as a product that everyone wanted and had to pay for and later developed into a “natural right”. (pg 184)** The commodification of electricity was really interesting to read about and wonder what if electricity had been taken over by the national government and ran through it? This is something that I had never previously even known or thought about really. I think that electricity being privatized at the time makes complete sense but it makes me wonder the outcome of it if the government had taken it over. I thought the last section on page 184 really captured the main meaning of what is electricity perfectly. Essentially power companies took something that was a basic right and sold it out to whoever could afford it until finally there was a change where it was seen as something that everyone everywhere would be able to have. - Tory Martin | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | **The quote on page 139 " | ||
==== Chapter 7, Rural Lines -- 287-291, 304-307, 314-317, 322-338 ==== | ==== Chapter 7, Rural Lines -- 287-291, 304-307, 314-317, 322-338 ==== | ||
- | I found it interesting to read about Theodore Roosevelt' | + | I found it interesting to read about Theodore Roosevelt' |
+ | |||
+ | The all-inclusiveness of Teddy Roosevelt' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Theodore Roosevelt sought to increase access of electricity to rural/farm areas. The push to provide those American’s with what we now take for granted, allowed farmers to progress at the speed of lightning (pun intended). - Elizabeth Davis |
325/questions/week_6_questions_comments-325_19.1570039046.txt.gz · Last modified: 2019/10/02 17:57 by 76.78.225.146