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The Body Electric: How Strange Machines Built the Modern American (American History and Culture, 11)

5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 ratings

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Between the years 1850 and 1950, Americans became the leading energy consumers on the planet, expending tremendous physical resources on energy exploration, mental resources on energy exploitation, and monetary resources on energy acquisition. A unique combination of pseudoscientific theories of health and the public’s rudimentary understanding of energy created an age in which sources of industrial power seemed capable of curing the physical limitations and ill health that plagued Victorian bodies. Licensed and “quack” physicians alike promoted machines, electricity, and radium as invigorating cures, veritable “fountains of youth” that would infuse the body with energy and push out disease and death.
The Body Electric is the first book to place changing ideas about fitness and gender in dialogue with the popular culture of technology. Whether through wearing electric belts, drinking radium water, or lifting mechanized weights, many Americans came to believe that by embracing the nation's rapid march to industrialization, electrification, and “radiomania,” their bodies would emerge fully powered. Only by uncovering this belief’s passions and products, Thomas de la Peña argues, can we fully understand our culture’s twentieth-century energy enthusiasm.

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Editorial Reviews

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"The Body Electric is the so-far missing puzzle piece in our nineteenth-twentieth century knowledge of the social history of the human body and technologya richly illustrated study showing two centuries of technologizing the human body against fears of weakness, enervation, sexual depletion." -- Cecelia Tichi,author of Shifting Gears: Technology, Literature, Culture in Modernist America

"This provocative exploration of the concept of energy in American medicine deftly ranges across medical theories, exercise machines and their inventors, early human potential movements, popular fads of electricity and radiation, and the national mood at the turn of the twentieth century. The author writes with wit and sympathy about medical theories and devices that may now seem like outright quackery but that formerly appealed to the educated as well as the gullible in their elusive search for good health. Building upon on a vast and vastly entertaining literature of medical pamphlets and ephemera, Carolyn Thomas de la Peña brings a discerning intelligence and an energetic analytic style to the cultural history of medicine, faith, science, and technology." -- Jeffrey L. Meikle,University of Texas, Austin

"Transforming archival research into sparkling prose, The Body Electric explains how Americans learned to use machines to seek health, sexual rejuvenation, and physical transformation. This innovative book is both an entertaining history of fads and foibles and a groundbreaking cultural critique of the continuing obsession with achieving physical perfection." -- David E. Nye,author of Electrifying America and America as Second Creation

"Covers its subject well, provides useful context, and makes lively reading for anyone interested in the history of technology, the social context of electricity and radioactive materials, or the history of alternative medicine." ―
Technology and Culture

About the Author

Carolyn Thomas de la Peña is Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of California at Davis.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ NYU Press (April 1, 2005)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 329 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 081471983X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0814719831
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 15.2 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.75 x 1 x 8.75 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 ratings

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Carolyn Thomas de la Peña
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5 out of 5 stars
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 9, 2018
A compelling study of the relationship between technology and the body. Thomas explains how and why we turned to machines to improve our bodies at the turn of the 20th century. Topics include electric belts, radium water, mechanized weights, magnetism, and other "energetic technologies." An impressive interdisciplinary examination of the role of technology in American life.
Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2003
As I read this book, I marveled at the way in which Ms. Thomas de la Pena explained in detail the obsession Americans have had for so long with physical fitness and weight loss techniques; the belief by many Americans that their bodies, after use of some of these documented, extreme -- to us -- measures, would emerge greatly improved. This book helps us energy-bar-eating, aerobically-charged, iron-pumping 21st-Century individuals understand how it is that we got this way!
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