American illuminations : urban lighting, 1800-1920 / David E. Nye.
2018
TD195.L52 N94 2018eb
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Title
American illuminations : urban lighting, 1800-1920 / David E. Nye.
Author
ISBN
9780262344784 (electronic bk.)
0262344785 (electronic bk.)
9780262037419
0262037416
0262344785 (electronic bk.)
9780262037419
0262037416
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press, [2018]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (x, 280 pages)
Call Number
TD195.L52 N94 2018eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
388.3/12
Summary
How Americans adapted European royal illuminations for patriotic celebrations, spectacular expositions, and intensely bright commercial lighting to create the world's most dazzling and glamorous cities.Illuminated ftes and civic celebrations began in Renaissance Italy and spread through the courts of Europe. Their fireworks, torches, lamps, and special effects glorified the monarch, marked the birth of a prince, or celebrated military victory. Nineteenth-century Americans rejected such monarchial pomp and adapted spectacular lighting to their democratic, commercial culture. InAmerican Illuminations,David Nye explains how they experimented with gas and electric light to create illuminated cityscapes far brighter and more dynamic than those of Europe, and how these illuminations became symbols of modernity and the conquest of nature.Americans used gaslight and electricity in parades, expositions, advertising, elections, and political spectacles. In the 1880s, cities erected powerful arc lights on towers to create artificial moonlight. By the 1890s they adopted more intensive, commercial lighting that defined distinct zones of light and glamorized the city's White Ways, skyscrapers, bridges, department stores, theaters, and dance halls. Poor and blighted areas disappeared into the shadows. American illuminations also became integral parts of national political campaigns, presidential inaugurations, and victory celebrations after the Spanish-American War and World War I.
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