Zero Degrees: Geographies of the Prime Meridian

Available
Product Details
Price
$49.20
Publisher
Harvard University Press
Publish Date
Pages
336
Dimensions
6.1 X 9.3 X 1.1 inches | 1.45 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780674088818

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About the Author
Charles W. J. Withers is Ogilvie Chair of Geography, University of Edinburgh, and Geographer Royal for Scotland.
Reviews
[A] wonderful new book on the long and uneven history of the Prime Meridian...The book is deeply and impeccably researched, and immensely detailed, but it is always a fascinating and compelling read...It is hard to imagine a better, fuller or more coherent account of how modern time came to be.--Penny Fielding "Journal of British Studies" (1/1/2018 12:00:00 AM)

[A] compelling book...Withers manages to turn what might have been an obscure, rather technical topic into a fascinating account of international rivalry and a meditation on what the whole business of measuring the world around us can reveal about broader
cultural patterns.

--Jon Wright "Geographical" (4/1/2017 12:00:00 AM)
An extremely well researched book that ties together various disciplines and fills in details absent from previous single works on the subject...[Zero Degrees] will serve libraries, scholars, and researchers well for a longtime to come.--Ian Fowler "Journal of Historical Geography"
This is a delightful and thoughtful book...As an artifact, it is also beautifully produced by its publisher.--Richard Sorrenson "Bulletin of the Pacific Circle" (10/1/2019 12:00:00 AM)
Charles Withers raises fundamental questions about themes of great contemporary relevance: the ways in which competing local and national interests can ever be reconciled around themes of urgent technological and political concern, and the very question of what counts as global action and globalised authority. Not at all a simple tale of rational planning and of reasoned debate, the stories told here emerge in startling detail as more complex, more fascinating and more consequential than has ever previously been recognised. This is a story of compromise and cunning, of improvisation and partisanship, bringing the highest standards of geographical and historical scholarship to bear on the fundamental problem of the meridian.--Simon Schaffer, University of Cambridge
This is a rich and valuable book about an important narrative in the history of science and geography, one that presents a longer and deeper historical context for the choice of Greenwich than any other accounts.--Richard Dunn, Senior Curator and Head of Science and Technology, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich