MARC Record
Leader
001
13850
005
20230123101040.0
008
170627s2016 0 e
020
a| 9780262035262
041
a| eng
100
a| Wittje, Roland
4| aut
9| 15812
245
a| The age of electroacoustics: transforming science and sound
260
a| Cambridge
b| The MIT Press
c| 2016
300
a| 297 pages
490
a| Transformations: studies in the history of science and technology
520
a| At the end of the nineteenth century, acoustics was a science of musical sounds; the musically trained ear was the ultimate reference. Just a few decades into the twentieth century, acoustics had undergone a transformation from a scientific field based on the understanding of classical music to one guided by electrical engineering, with industrial and military applications. In this book, Roland Wittje traces this transition, from the late nineteenth-century work of Hermann Helmholtz to the militarized research of World War I and media technology in the 1930s. Wittje shows that physics in the early twentieth century was not only about relativity and atomic structure but encompassed a range of experimental, applied, and industrial research fields. The emergence of technical acoustics and electroacoustics illustrates a scientific field at the intersection of science and technology. Wittje starts with Helmholtzs and Rayleighs work and its intersection with telegraphy and early wireless, and continues with the industrialization of acoustics during World War I, when sound measurement was automated and electrical engineering and radio took over the concept of noise. Researchers no longer appealed to the musically trained ear to understand sound but to the thinking and practices of electrical engineering. Finally, Wittje covers the demilitarization of acoustics during the Weimar Republic and its remilitarization at the beginning of the Third Reich. He shows how technical acoustics fit well with the Nazi dismissal of pure science, representing everything that German Physics under National Socialism should be: experimental, applied, and relevant to the military.
942
c| BOO
2| ddc
920
a| boek
852
b| ORPH
c| ORPH
j| ORPH.SCI WITT
999
c| 13850
d| 13850