Bestselling and bargain books: Collecting Clocks Watches
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Books -> Collecting Clocks Watches
History of the Hour : Clocks and Modern Temporal Orders
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by:
Rossum, Gerhard Dohrn-van
Dunlap, Thomas (Translator)
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Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: May 8, 1998
ISBN: 0226155110
Format:Paperback
Pages:463
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Book Description
From Library Journal Today it is impossible to think of a life unregulated by clocks or a day structured other than in 24 60-minute hours. In the Middle Ages it was different, however, and changing. Historian Dohrn-van Rossum (Univ. of Bielefeld,
Germany) examines in detail the technical developments that time-keeping mechanisms were undergoing, principally between 1300 and 1600, and the subtle interactions of these developments with European culture (political, religious, economic, and
scientific). Some previous theories are debunked. Readable and thoroughly researched, this is required for history of science collections.?Michael D. Cramer, Virginia Polytechnic and State Univ. Libs., Blacksburg Copyright 1996 Reed Business
Information, Inc.
Product Description: In this sweeping study of the organization of time, Dohrn-van Rossum offers fresh insight into the history of the mechanical clock and its influence on European society from the late Middle Ages to the
industrial revolution. Detailing the clock's effects on social activity, he presents a vivid picture of a society regulated by the precise measurement of identical hours.
"In tracing the evolution of time consciousness with scholarship and skill
. . . Dohrn-van Rossum evokes the many ways that the small moments of life have come to be reckoned with the passage of time."--Dava Sobel, Civilization
"Dohrn-van Rossum paints a highly nuanced picture of time's conquest of modern life."--Steven
Lagerfeld, Wilson Quarterly
"This book is definitive in showing the clock's pervasive influence over European society."--Virginia Quarterly Review
"[A] delightful, excellently translated history."--Choice
"Dohrn-van Rossum has
produced a persuasive and brilliantly documented new understanding of how modern time-consciousness arose."--Owen Gingerich, Nature
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