| Neil Barton Biblio Jrnl Articles 1948-1979 Biblio Jrnl Articles 1980-1989 Biblio Jrnl Articles 1990-1999 Biblio Jrnl Articles 2000-2006 Links |
History of Post and Telecoms Bibliography |
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Andrews, Melodie (1990), “’What the Girls Can Do’: The Debate Over the Employment of Women in the Early American Telegraph Industry”, Essays in Economic and Business History 8 (1990): 109-120 Goheen P (1990), “The Impact of the Telegraph on the Newspaper in Mid-Nineteenth Century British North America”, Urban Geography 11 (2): 107-129 Gorman, Michael E & Carlsson, Bernard (1990), “Interpreting invention as a cognitive process: The case of Alexander Graham Bell, Thomas Edison, and the telephone”, In: Science, Technology, and Human Values 1990, 15: 131-164 Guldmann J (1990), “Economies of Scale and Density in Local Telephone Networks”, pp521-533 in Regional Science and Urban Economics, 20 Haltman, Kenneth (1990), “Reaching Out to Touch Someone?: Reflections on a 1923 Candlestick Telephone”, In: Technology in Society v. 12, 1990, p. 333-54 Hoddeson, Lilian (1990), “Innovation and Basic Research in the Industrial Laboratory: The Repeater, Transistor, and Bell Telephone System”, In: Between Science and Technology -- Amsterdam, Elsevier, 1990 p. 181-214 Starr F (1990), “New Communications Technologies and Civil Society” pp19-50 in Graham L (ed.) (1990), Science and the Soviet Social Order, Cambridge MA, Harvard University Press Brittain, James E (1991), “Scanning the Past: Morse and the Telegraph”, In: Proceedings of the IEEE v. 79, April 1991, p. 591-92 Brodie, Robert N. (1991), “'Take a Wire, Like a Good Fellow': The Telegraph in the Canon”, The Baker Street Journal: An Irregular Quarterly of Sherlockiana 41, no. 3 (1991 Sept): p. 148-52 Burns, R. W (1991), “The Contributions of the Bell Telephone Laboratories to the Early Development of Television”, In: History of Technology v. 13, 1991, p. 181-213 Cohen J (1991), “The Telephone Problem and the Road to Telephone Regulation in the United States 1876-1917”, pp 42-69 in Journal of Policy History 3 (1) Foreman-Peck J (1991/2), “The Development and Diffusion of Telephone Technology in Britain” 1900-1940”, Transactions of the Newcomen Society 63: 165-180 Hunt, Bruce J (1991), “Michael Faraday, Cable Telegraphy, and the Rise of Field Theory”, History of Technology v. 13, 1991, pp. 1-19. Israel P & Nier K (1991), “The Transfer of Telegraph Technologies in the Nineteenth Century” pp95-121 in Jeremy D (ed), International Technology Transfer: Europe, Japan and the USA 1700-1914, Aldershot, Edward Elgar Publishing Kang, Ung (1991), “The Development of the Telegraph in Korea in the Late 19th Century”, Kagakusi Kenkyu v. 30, 1991, p. 161-69 Morrison, James H. (1991), 'The duke of Kent's astonishing telegraph : Halifax, 1799'. Beaver, 71:6 (1991-2), 24-32. Morus I (1991), “Telegraphy and the Technology of Display: The Electricians and Samuel Morse”, History of Technology 13: 20-40 Reader WJ (1991), ‘The Engineer Must be a Scientific Man: The Origins of the Society of Telegraph Engineers’, History of Technology 13 1991, p112-18 Solnick S (1991), “Revolution, Reform and the Soviet Telephone System 1917-1927”, Soviet Studies 43 (1991) pp 157-176 Tillotson, Shirley (1991), “Ẁe May All Soon be First-Class Men': Gender and Skill in Canada's Early Twentieth Century Urban Telegraph Industry”, In: Labour = Le Travail v. 27, Spring 1991, p. 97-125 Budwey, James N (1992), “A Metamorphosis in Communication: 25 Years in the Making”, In: Telecommunications v. 26, June 1992, p. 21-22 Carlson, W. Bernard & Gorman, Michael (1992), A cognitive framework to understand technological creativity: Bell, Edison, and the telephone, pp.48-79 in Robert J. Weber, David H. Perkins (eds.), Inventive minds: Creativity in technology, New York : Oxford Univ. Press, 1992. Chakravarthi, P (1992), “The History of Communications: From Cave Drawings to Mail Messages”, In: IEEE Aerospace and Electronics Systems Magazine v. 7, no. 4, April 1992, p. 30-35 Field A (1992), “The Magnetic Telegraph, Price and Quantity Data, and the New Management of Capital”, Journal of Economic History 52 (June 1992) pp 401-413 Galambos, Louis (1992), “Theodore N. Vail and the role of innovation in the modern Bell System”, In: Business History Review 1992, 66: 95-126 Goldstein, Andrew (1992), “Bell Labs, the Transistor, and the Limitations of Mission Oriented Research”, In: Wescon Conference Record v. 36, 1992, p. 808-12 Groman, Michael E (1992), “Mapping Invention and Design: The Invention of the Telephone Gives Insight on the Process of Technological Creativity”, In: Chemtech Oct. 1992, p. 584-91 Lewis, W. David (1992), “The Airmail Pickup System of All American Aviation: A Failed Innovation”, In: Social Studies of Science v. 22, 1992, p. 301-15 Zimmeck, Meta (1992), Marry in haste, repent at leisure : women, bureaucracy and the post office, 1870-1920”, In: Sociological review monograph Vol. 39 (1992) p. 65-93 Andrews, Miriam (1993), “America's First Airmail”, In: American Heritage of Invention and Technology v. 9, Summer 1993, p. 24-25 Flichy P (1993), “The Birth of Long Distance Communication Semaphore Telegraphs in Europe 1790-1840”, Reseaux: The French Journal of Communication 1: 81-101 Gardner, Helen B (1993), “The People's Progressive Telephone Company, 1912-1917: The Dream and the Reality”, In: Utah Historical Quarterly v. 51, Winter 1993, p. 79-94 Gorman, Michael E et al (1993), “Alexander Graham Bell, Elisha Gray and the speaking telegraph: A cognitive comparison” In: History of Technology 1993, 15: 1-56 Gorton, Walter Charles (1993), 'Walter Charles Gorton : London messenger and telegraphist of the twenties.' Metropolitan : the journal of the London & North Middlesex Family History Society, 15 (1993), 120-22, XVI (1993) 12-14. Klein, Maury (1993), “What Hath God Wrought?”, American Heritage of Invention and Technology v. 8, Spring 1993, p. 34-43. Kragh, Helge (1993), “Transatlantic technology transfer: The reception and early use of the telephone in USA and Europe”, In: Dan Ch. Christensen, European historiography of technology / p.68-90 Odense : Odense Univ. Press, 1993. Tannenbaum, Morris (1993), “The Historical Evolution of U.S. Telecommunications”, Technology in Society v. 15, 1993, pp. 263-72. Ascari, Maurizio (1994), “One-Way Words: An Interpretation of In the Cage, by Henry James”, Rivista di Studi Anglo-Americani 8, no. 10 (1994): p. 244-54 Blondheim, Menahem (1994), When bad things happen to good technologies: Three phases in the diffusion and perception of American telegraphy, pp.77-92 in: Technology, pessimism, and postmodernism, Yaron Ezrahi (et al.), (eds.) Dordrecht, Kluwer Academic, 1994 Carlson, W. Bernard (1994), “Entrepreneurship in the Early Development of the Telephone: How Did William Orton and Gardiner Hubbard Conceptualize This New Technology?”, In: Business and Economic History v. 23, Winter 1994, p. 161-92 Dyson, Robert L (1994), “Cleaning Fires and Working the Wires: From Railroad Engine Watchman to Station Agent-Telegrapher in 1940s Iowa”, Palimpsest v. 75, Spring 1994, p. 16-29. Field Alexander (1994), “French Optical Telegraphy 1793-1855: Hardware, Software, Administration”, Technology and Culture 35: 315-347 Gabel, David (1994), “Competition in a Network Industry: The Telephone Industry, 1894-1910”, In: Journal of Economic History v. 54, Sept. 1994, p. 543-72 Ghose, Saroj (1994), 'William O'Shaughnessy - an innovator and entrepreneur'. Indian Journal of History of Science, 29 (1994), 9-22. Holzmann, Gerard (1994), ‘The First Data Networks’, Scientific American 270 1994, p124-9 Hong, Sungook (1994), 'Marconi and the Maxwellians: the origins of wireless telegraphy', Technology and Culture 35(4): 717-749 Hunt Bruce (1994), ‘The ohm is where the art is: British telegraph engineers and the development of electrical standards’, Osiris 9: 48-64 John R (1994), “American Historians and the Concept of the Communications Revolution” pp98-110 in Bud-Frierman L (ed) (1994), Information Acumen: The Understanding and Use of Knowledge in Modern Business, London, Routledge Kragh, Helge (1994), “The Krarup Cable: Invention and Early Development”, In: Technology and Culture v. 35, Jan. 1994, p. 129-57 Kielbowicz, Richard B (1994), “The Telegraph, Censorship, and Politics at the Outset of the Civil War”, In: Civil War History v. 40, no. 2, 1994, p. 95-118 Lipartito, Kenneth (1994), “When women were switches: Technology, work, and gender in the telephone industry, 1890-1920”, In: American Historical Review 1994, 99: 1075-1111 Lipartito, Kenneth J (1994), “Component Innovation: The Case of Automatic Telephone Switching, 1891-1920”, In: Industrial and Corporate Change v. 3, no. 2, 1994, p. 325-57 Rawling, Bill (1994), “Communications in the Canadian Corps, 1915-1918: Wartime Technological Progress Revisited”, In: Canadian Military History v. 3, Autumn 1994, p. 6-21 Ville, Simon P (1994), “Transport and Communications”, In: European Economy, 1750-1914: A Thematic Approach -- Manchester and New York, Manchester Univ. Press, 1994 p. 184-215 Boyce, R (1995), “Submarine Cables as a Factor in Britain’s Ascendancy as a World Power 1850-1914”, pp81-90 in North, Michael (ed.), Kommunikationsrevolutionen : die neuen Medien des 16. und 19. Jahrhunderts, Köln: Böhlau, 1995 Cantelon, Philip L (1995), “The origins of microwave telephony--Waves of change”, In: Technology and Culture 1995, 36: 560-582 Clow, D. G. (1995), 'Pneumatic tube communication systems in London'. Transactions of the Newcomen Society, 66 (1995), 97-120 Coopersmith, Jonathan (1995), “Losing the Race: The British Post Office and Picture Telegraphy”, In: Essays in Economic and Business History v. 13, 1995, p. 71-82 Davids, Mila (1995), “The Relationship between the State Enterprise for Postal, Telegraph and Telephone Services and the State in the Netherlands in Historical Perspective” pp194-205 in Business and Economic History, 24, 1, Spring 1995 Ghose S (1995), “Commercial Needs and Military Necessities: The Telegraph in India” pp153-176 in Macleod R & Kumar D (eds.) (1995), Technology and the Raj: Western Technology and Technical Transfers to India 1700-1947, New Delhi, Sage Green, Venus (1995), “Race and Technology: African American Women in the Bell System, 1945-1980”, In: Technology and Culture v. 36, April 1995, p. S101-S143 Green Venus (1995), “Goodbye Central: Automation and the Decline of ‘Personal Service’ in the Bell System 1878-1921”, Technology and Culture 36: 912-949 Hempstead, Colin A (1995), “Representations of Transatlantic Telegraphy”, Engineering Science and Education Journal v. 4, Dec. 1995, p. S17-S25. Jepsen, Thomas C (1995), “Women Telegraphers in the Railroad Depot”, In: Railroad History v. 173, Autumn 1995, p. 142-54 Mitchell, Will (1995), “Special Issue on Telecommunications Policy and Strategy”, In: Industrial and Corporate Change v. 4, no. 4, 1995, p. 639-814 Moody, Andres J. (1995), “'The Harmless Pleasure of Knowing': Privacy in the Telegraph Office and Henry James's 'In the Cage'”,October 17, 20065 Rossi, John P (1995), “Broad Principles of Cooperation? The Open Door and Western Electric in China, 1917-1925”, In: Essays in Economic and Business History v. 13, 1995, p. 231-46 Wharf, Barney (1995), “Telecommunications and the Changing Geographies of Knowledge Transmission in the Late Twentieth Century”, Urban Studies 32 (1995): 361-378 Bakke, John W (1996), “Technologies and interpretations: The case of the telephone”, Knowledge and Society: Studies in the Sociology of Culture Past and Present 1996, 10: 87-107. Davin, Anna. (1996), 'Women telegraphists and typists, 1870-90'. Women in industry and technology, ed. A. Devonshire and B. Wood (London: Museum of London, 1996), 213-23. Early, Julie English (1996), “Technology, modernity, and 'the little man': Crippen's capture by wireless”, Victorian Studies 1996, 39: 309-337 Hochfelder, David (1996), “Electrical Communication, Language, and Self”, in Krieger, Technohistory: Using the History of American Technology in Interdisciplinary Research, 1996 p. 119-40. Hong, Sungook. (1996), 'Styles and credit in early radio engineering : Fleming and Marconi on the first transatlantic wireless telegraphy'. Annals of Science, 53:5 (1996), 431-65. Hunt, Bruce J. (1996), 'Scientists, engineers and Wildman Whitehouse : measurement and credibility in early cable telegraphy'. British Journal for the History of Science, 29 (1996), 155-69. Fone, J. F. (1996), 'Signalling from Norwich to the coast in the Napoleonic period'. Norfolk Archaeology, 42 (1996), 356-61. Hong, Sungook (1996), “Syntony and credibility: John Ambrose Fleming, Guglielmo Marconi, and the Maskelyne affair”, In: / Jed Z. Buchwald (ed.), Scientific credibility and technical standards in 19th and early 20th century Germany and Britain p.157-176 Dordrecht : Kluwer Academic, 1996. Jepsen, Thomas C (1996), “Women Telegraph Operators on the Western Frontier”, Journal of the West v. 35, April 1996, p. 72-80. Peters, Tom F (1996), 'Building the Nineteenth Century', MIT Press, Chapter 1, 'Creating the Modern World through Communications, Commerce and Progress'. Stein J (1996), “Annihilating Space and Time: The Modernisation of Fire-fighting in Late Ninteenth-century Cornwall Ontario”, Urban History Review 24 2 (March 1996): 3-11 Morus I (1996), “The Electric Ariel: Telegraphy and Commercial Culture in Early Victorian England”, Victorian Studies 39: 339-378 Thrift N (1996), “New Urban Eras and Old Technological Fears: Reconfiguring the Goodwill of Electronic Things, pp1463-1494 in Urban Studies Vol 33 No 8 October 1996 Adams J. M. (1997), "Development of the Anglo-Indian Telegraph," Engineering Science and Education Journal (August 1997): Clayton, Jay (1997), ‘The Voice in the Machine: Hazlitt, Hardy, James’, pp209-232 in Masten, Jeffrey, Stallybrass, Peter, & Vickers, Nancy (eds.) (1997), Language Machines: Technologies of Literary and Cultural Production, New York, Routledge Davids, Mila (1997), ‘European Co-operation in Telecommunications and the Dutch PTT 1950s-1980s’ in Olsson, U (ed.) (1997), Business and European Integration since 1800: Regional, National and International Perspectives, Goteborg Gorman, Michael E (1997), “Mind in the world: Cognition and practice in the invention of the telephone”, In: Social Studies of Science 1997, 27: 583-624 Harrison, Philip (1997), “Post-Horse Routes, Royal Progress and Government Communications in the Reign of James I”, In: Journal of Transport History v. 18, Sept. 1997, p. 116-33 Hunt, Bruce J. (1997), 'Doing science in a global empire : cable telegraphy and electrical physics in Victorian Britain'. In Lightman, Bernard V. (ed.), Victorian science in context, Chicago (IL): Chicago University Press, 1997, 312-33. Michie R (1997), ‘Friend or foe? Information technology and the London Stock Exchange since 1700’, Journal of Historical Geography Vol 23 :304-326, London, Academic Press Neilson, Keith. (1997), '"For diplomatic, economic, strategy and telegraphic reasons" : British imperial defence, the Middle East and India, 1914-1918'. In Kennedy, Gregory C.; Neilson, Keith (ed.), Far-flung lines : essays on imperial defence in honour of Donald Mackenzie Schurman London: Cass, 1997, 103-23. Nonnenmacher, Tomas (1997), “Law, Emerging Technology, and Market Structure: The Development of the Telegraph Industry, 1838-1868”, In: Journal of Economic History v. 57, June 1997, p. 488-491 Nye D (1997), Shaping Communications Networks: Telegraph, Telephone, Computer, Social Research 64:3 (Fall 1997) p1081 Perry, C. R. (1997), “The Rise and Fall of Government Telegraphy in Britain.” Business and Economic History 26, no. 2 (Winter 1997): 416-25. Poitras C (1997), “Le téléphone dans une grande ville industrielle nord-américaine: Montréal 1880-1930, Les Cahiers, Telecommunications, Histoire et Societe 5: 7-37 Rantanen T (1997), “The globalisation of electronic news in the 19th century”, Media, Culture & Society, 19 (4): 605-620 Winthrop-Young, Geoffrey (1997), “The Infomatics of Revenge: Telegraphy, Speed and Storage in The Count of Monte Cristo”, Weber Studies: An Interdisciplinary Humanities Journal 14, no. 1 (1997 Winter): p. 5-17 Barton, Ellen L. (1998), “The Grammar of Telegraphic Structures: Sentential and Nonsentential Derivation”, Journal of English Linguistics 26, no. 1 (1998 Mar): p. 37-67 Boyd-Barrett O (1998), ‘Global News Agencies’, pp19-34 in Boyd-Barrett O & Rantenen T (eds) (1998), The Globalisation of News, London, Sage Gorman, Michael E & Robinson, Kirby (1998), “Using history to teach invention and design: The case of the telephone”, Science and Education: Contributions from History, Philosophy, and Sociology of Science and Mathematics 1998, 7: 173-201 Hillis K (1998), “On the margins: The invisibility of communications in geography”, pp 543-565 in Progress in Human Geography 22:4 John R (1998), “The Politics of Innovation”, Daedalus 127 (fall 1998) pp187-214 McCormack, Jerusha (1998), “Dispatches from the Cage: Henry James and Information Technology”, Irish Journal of American Studies 7, (1998): p. 79-99 Scholl, Lars U. (1998), 'The global communications industry and its impact on international shipping before 1914'. In Starkey, David John; Harlaftis, Gelina (ed.), Global markets : the internationalization of the sea transport industries since 1850 (Research in Maritime History, 14) (St John's (Nfld): International Maritime Economic History Association, 1998), 195-215 Clark, G (1999), “Usage of the postal system in mid-eighteenth-century Berkshire : an exploration from the Foundling Hospital archives”, In: Local historian Vol. 29 (1999), p. 152-166 Field, A (1999), “The Telegraph Transmission of Financial Asset Prices” pp496 in The Journal of Economic History, 59,2 June 1999 Nickles, David (1999), ‘Telegraph Diplomats: The United States’ Relations with France in 1848 and 1870’, Technology and Culture 40 (1) Noakes, R. J. (1999), 'Telegraphy is an occult art : Cromwell Fleetwood Varley and the diffusion of electricity to the other world'. British Journal for the History of Science, 32:4 (1999), 421-59. Stein J (1999), “The telephone: its social shaping and public negotiation in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century London pp44-63 in Crang M, Crang P, & May J (eds) Virtual Geographies: Bodies, space and relations, London, Routledge Winseck, Dwayne (1999), 'Back to the future : telecommunications, online information services and convergence from 1840 to 1910'. Media History, 5:2 (1999), 137-57. |
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