9780195160321-0195160320-Inventing Modern: Growing up with X-Rays, Skyscrapers, and Tailfins

Inventing Modern: Growing up with X-Rays, Skyscrapers, and Tailfins

ISBN-13: 9780195160321
ISBN-10: 0195160320
Author: John H Lienhard IV
Publication date: 2003
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardcover 304 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780195160321
ISBN-10: 0195160320
Author: John H Lienhard IV
Publication date: 2003
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardcover 304 pages

Summary

Inventing Modern: Growing up with X-Rays, Skyscrapers, and Tailfins (ISBN-13: 9780195160321 and ISBN-10: 0195160320), written by authors John H Lienhard IV, was published by Oxford University Press in 2003. With an overall rating of 4.3 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Inventing Modern: Growing up with X-Rays, Skyscrapers, and Tailfins (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.51.

Description

Modern is a word much used, but hard to pin down. In Inventing Modern, John H. Lienhard uses that word to capture the furious rush of newness in the first half of 20th-century America. An unexpected world emerges from under the more familiar Modern. Beyond the airplanes, radios, art deco, skyscrapers, Fritz Lang's Metropolis, Buck Rogers, the culture of the open road--Burma Shave, Kerouac, and White Castles--lie driving forces that set this account of Modern apart.
One force, says Lienhard, was a new concept of boyhood--the risk-taking, hands-on savage inventor. Driven by an admiration of recklessness, America developed its technological empire with stunning speed. Bringing the airplane to fruition in so short a time, for example, were people such as Katherine Stinson, Lincoln Beachey, Amelia Earhart, and Charles Lindbergh. The rediscovery of mystery powerfully drove Modern as well. X-Rays, quantum mechanics, and relativity theory had followed electricity and radium. Here we read how, with reality seemingly altered, hope seemed limitless.
Lienhard blends these forces with his childhood in the brave new world. The result is perceptive, engaging, and filled with surprise. Whether he talks about Alexander Calder (an engineer whose sculptures were exercises in materials science) or that wacky paean to flight, Flying Down to Rio, unexpected detail emerges from every tile of this large mosaic.
Inventing Modern is a personal book that displays, rather than defines, an age that ended before most of us were born. It is an engineer's homage to a time before the bomb and our terrible loss of confidence--a time that might yet rise again out of its own postmodern ashes.

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