Happy Apocalypse
By Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
Translated by David Broder
By Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
Translated by David Broder
By Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
Translated by David Broder
By Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
Translated by David Broder
Category: Domestic Politics | Science & Technology
Category: Domestic Politics | Science & Technology
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$29.95
Jun 18, 2024 | ISBN 9781839765506
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Jun 18, 2024 | ISBN 9781839765520
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Praise
“Happy Apocalypse offers a compelling, powerful and very timely critique of the claim that we live in a period unprecedentedly marked by an awareness of technological crises and environmental risks. Fressoz shows instead, and in striking detail, how in France and Britain in the decades around 1800, in major fields of concern such as public health, industrial safety and environmental impact, calculations of risk and estimates of safety were both impressively widespread and energetically debated. The book offers a brilliantly original analysis of how industrialists and entrepreneurs, legislators and scientists, public lobbies and private interests, all made sense of the processes that accompanied the establishment of new kinds of capitalist society and their models of welfare, profit and security. Happy Apocalypse will be required reading for anyone concerned with the ways in which current crises of safety and survival can be better understood in their proper historical settings.”
—Simon Schaffer, University of Cambridge
“This book is a luminous enquiry into how society was remade to acquiesce in the risks presented by new medical procedures, new forms of lighting and industrial waste. Instead of fables of ignorance, a naïve belief in progress, or ridiculous opposition to the novel Fressoz shows how, in nineteenth-century France in particular, a powerful environmental consciousness was remoulded through complex political and juridical processes to make possible the use of the new. This book is essential reading for anyone interested in how the modern world changes, and a refreshing antidote to the banalities and mendacities which still dominate our discussions of technical and medical change.”
—David Edgerton, King’s College London
“Casting light on how humanity sleepwalked its way into the climate crisis, this meticulous study examines how harmful technologies overcame initial public resistance on their way to widespread acceptance in early 19th-century France.”
—Publishers Weekly
Table Of Contents
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Little Modern Disinhibitions
1 Inoculated with Risk
2 The Philanthropic Virus
3 The Ancien Régime and Humanity’s ‘Environmental Surroundings’
4 Liberalising the Environment
5 Lighting up France after Waterloo
6 The Mechanics of Fault
Conclusion
Afterword
Index
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