James Watt: Making the World Anew
Publication details: United Kingdom; Reaktion Books; 15 Aug 2014Description: 256 Pages; HardbackISBN:- 9781780233758
- 609.2 RUS
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book Adult and Young Adult 15-17 | Karachi Biography | 609.2 WAT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | PKLC006746 | |||
Book Adult and Young Adult 15-17 | Lahore In Store | 609.2 WAT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Withdrawn | donated to the faislabad festival 2019 | PKLC011267 |
Browsing Karachi shelves, Shelving location: Biography Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
577.27 HOU In the Eye of the Storm: The Autobiography of Sir John Houghton | 590.92 DUR My family and Other Animals | 598.94 MAC H is for Hawk | 609.2 WAT James Watt: Making the World Anew | 610.73 BEE The New Arrival : The Heartwarming True Story of a 1970s Trainee Nurse | 610.92 ABU I Shall Not Hate | 610.92 ADA This Is Going to Hurt : Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor |
Among the many treasures in the collections of the Science Museum in London is the complete workshop of the Scottish engineer James Watt (1736-1819), acquired in its entirety from the attic of Watt's Birmingham home in 1924, where it had been left as an industrial shrine since his death in 1819. Watt is best known for his pioneering work on the steam engine, but the workshop contains very few engine-related items. Instead, it is filled with jars of chemicals, sculpture-copying machines and materials, a profusion of instruments and objects and evidence of Watt's many diverse projects. Traditional biographies of Watt have concentrated on the steam engine, but Ben Russell tells a richer story, exploring the processes by which ephemeral ideas were transformed into tangible artefacts and the multifaceted world of production upon which Britain's industrial revolution depended. James Watt: Making the World Anew is a craft history of Britain's early industrial transformation as well as a prehistory of the engineering profession itself.It explores the motivation for making things, looking not only at what was produced but also why, drawing on a rich range of resources - not just archival material and biographies on Watt but also objects themselves, and sources from fields as diverse as ceramics, antique systems of proportion, sculpture and machine making. Generously illustrated, James Watt is a unique, expansive exploration of the engineer's life, not as an end in itself but as a lens through which the broader practices of making and manufacturing in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries can be explored.
There are no comments on this title.