This event will be presented online ONLY.
This Mill Talk will be live-streamed on YouTube. You can simply “Click Here” or on the window below.
"Does Technology Drive History?"
All Mill Talks are FREE and open to the public
Robot pushing a reluctant man and woman into the future. From the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair, which used the motto “Science Finds, Industry Applies, Man Conforms.”
Technology has been central to human civilization from the beginning. Throughout most of our existence, technological and social changes happened slowly. However, this pace accelerated around the turn of the 19th century. Innovations like the steam engine, telegraphy, electrification, the automobile, the electronic mass media, and, lately, computing and information systems have transformed the ways in which we communicate, travel, work, and play.
The impact of technology on our everyday lives leads many of us to the conclusion that technology shapes society. In this conversation, we will explore the relationship between technological change and social change. We will pay particular attention to the telegraph, the first technology to harness electricity, and the first step toward today’s world of the Internet and smartphones.
Dave Hochfelder is associate professor of History at University at Albany, SUNY. Before earning his PhD in History at Case Western Reserve University, he earned a BS and MS in Electrical Engineering at Northwestern University. He is the author of The Telegraph in America, 1832-1920 (2012). He is presently working on a digital history of urban renewal (with Ann Pfau and Stacy Sewell) called Picturing Urban Renewal, for which they have received two National Endowment for the Humanities planning grants. They blog at https://98acresinalbany.wordpress.com/.
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The Mill Talks at the Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation are free and open to the public and are made possible by the generous support of the Lowell Institute.
We will record this event and, after some post-production editing, post it permanently to our YouTube Channel in the coming weeks, where you can also find many past Mill Talks and other interesting video content from the Charles River Museum!