Now updated -- A comprehensive, 500-year history of technology in
society.
Historian Thomas J. Misa's sweeping history of the relationship between
technology and society over the past 500 years reveals how technological
innovations have shaped--and have been shaped by--the cultures in which
they arose. Spanning the preindustrial past, the age of scientific,
political, and industrial revolutions, as well as the more recent eras
of imperialism, modernism, and global security, this compelling work
evaluates what Misa calls "the question of technology."
In this edition, Misa brings his acclaimed text up to date by drawing on
current scholarship while retaining sharply drawn portraits of
individual people, artifacts, and systems. Each chapter has been honed
to relate to contemporary concerns. Globalization, Misa argues, looks
differently considering today's virulent nationalism, cultural
chauvinism, and trade wars. A new chapter focuses on the digital age
from 1990 to 2016. The book also examines how today's unsustainable
energy systems, insecure information networks, and vulnerable global
shipping have helped foster geopolitical risks and instability and takes
a look at the coronavirus pandemic from the perspective of Wuhan,
China's high-tech district.
A masterful analysis of how technology and culture have influenced each
other over five centuries, Leonardo to the Internet frames a history
that illuminates modern-day problems and prospects faced by our
technology-dependent world.