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Landscape & Environment, United States History - Social Aspects, United States Studies - General & Miscellaneous, American Colonial History - General & Miscellaneous, Frontier & Pioneer Life - Western United States, Human Geography - Historical Geography,
America as Second Creation: Technology and Narratives of New Beginnings by David E. Nye β€” book cover

America as Second Creation: Technology and Narratives of New Beginnings

by David E. Nye
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Overview

After 1776, the former American colonies began to reimagine themselves as a unified,self-created community. Technologies had an important role in the resulting national narratives, and a few technologies assumed particular prominence. Among these were the axe, the mill, the canal, the railroad, and the irrigation dam. In this book David Nye explores the stories that clustered around these technologies. In doing so, he rediscovers an American story of origins, with America conceived as a second creation built in harmony with God's first creation.While mainstream Americans constructed technological foundation stories to explain their place in the New World, however,marginalized groups told other stories of destruction and loss. Native Americans protested the loss of their forests, fishermen resisted the construction of dams, and early environmentalists feared the exhaustionof resources. A water mill could be viewed as the kernel of a new community or as a new way to exploit labor. If passengers comprehended railways as part of a larger narrative about American expansion and progress, many farmers attacked railroad land grants. To explore these contradictions, Nye devotes alternating chapters to narratives of second creation and to narratives of those who rejected it.Nye draws on popular literature, speeches, advertisements, paintings, and many other media to create a history of American foundation stories. He shows how these stories were revised periodically, as social and economic conditions changed, without ever erasing the earlier stories entirely. The image of the isolated frontier family carving a homestead out of the wilderness with an axe persists to this day, alongside later images and narratives. In the book's conclusion, Nye considers the relation between these earlier stories and such later American developments as the conservation movement, narratives of environmental recovery, and the idealization of wilderness.

Synopsis

An exploration of the dialogue that emerged after 1776 between different visions of what it meant to use new technologies to transform the land.

About the Author, David E. Nye

David E. Nye is Professor of American History at the University of Southern Denmark. The winner of the 2005 Leonardo da Vinci Medal of the Society for the History of Technology, he is the author of Image Worlds: Corporate Identities at General Electric, 1890-1930 (1985), Electrifying America: Social Meanings of a New Technology, 1880-1940 (1990), American Technological Sublime (1994), Consuming Power: A Social History of American Energies (1997), America as Second Creation: Technology and Narratives of New Beginnings (2003), and Technology Matters: Questions to Live With (2006), all published by the MIT Press.

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Editorials

From the Publisher

"Well imagined, meticulously researched, handsomely illustrated, and scrupulously fair." Simon Ings NewScientist

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2004
Publisher
MIT Press
Pages
383
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780262640596

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