
Description
The Imagined Empire explores how this material artifact, the flying machine, not only expanded the public for science and spectacle but inspired utopian dreams of a republican monarchy that would obliterate social boundaries. The balloon, Mi Gyung Kim argues, was a people-machine, a cultural performance that unified and mobilized the people of France, who imagined an aerial empire that would bring glory to the French nation. This critical history of ballooning considers how a relatively simple mechanical gadget became an explosive cultural and political phenomenon on the eve of the French Revolution.
Product Details
Publisher | University of Pittsburgh Press |
Publish Date | November 11, 2016 |
Pages | 472 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780822944652 |
Dimensions | 9.1 X 6.4 X 1.7 inches | 1.9 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
. . . well written and confidently argued.-- "Journal of European Studies"
The Imagined Empire helps fill in the French context of philosophical meanings carried by balloons in the 1780s; especially on the first year of balloon experiments, it adds productively to aerial thinking by exploring how science has a politics as well as a history.-- "Aero Society"
The Imagined Empire offers an enthralling inquiry into the origins of aerial flight. The work soars above the intricacies of the history of science and technology to offer readers a far-reaching panorama of the social, cultural, and political late eighteenth-century world that produced the first balloons.-- "Colin Jones, Queen Mary University of London"
Mi Gyung Kim provides a thoroughly researched and informative account of the development and popular reception of balloon flight in Old Regime France and beyond. . .-- "American Historical Review"
This book, with its wealth of material, addresses important issues not only on the history of balloons and ballooning, but also in the way that the beginning of manned flight connected to changes in the ways the world was experienced as a place of possibility and change in individuals and in the French Republics that came after 1789.-- "Dorinda Outram, University of Rochester"
This very sophisticated analysis of the ballooning era in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. . . will delight readers familiar with this period of European history. . . . Highly recommended.-- "Choice"
With this book, Mi Gyung Kim makes a major intervention in the scholarly literature on the period surrounding the French Revolution, offering a new account of the first constitution of the mass public in France through a revisionist history of ballooning.-- "Mary Terrall, University of California, Los Angeles"
Earn by promoting books