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The Electric Vehicle and the Burden of History
David A. Kirsch
Was the electric car ever a viable competitor for the petrol one? This book examines the
relationship of technology, society and environment to choice, policy and outcome in the history
of American transportation
The electric vehicle of historian David Kirsch's title is an old technology that seems ever
on the verge of making a comeback. In the late 1890s, the electric engine competed with steam-
and gasoline-driven engines to become the standard for automobile manufacturers, and it remained
competitive for nearly a decade until, in the early 1900s, the internal-combustion engine captured
the market. It did so for complex reasons, few of them, in Kirsch's account, having to do with purely
technological issues. Enter the "burden of history," a fruitful notion that reminds us that
deterministic ideas of why things are the way they are--for example, that the lead-acid battery
held insufficient power to carry cars over long distances without recharging, thus ensuring the
victory of the more easily replenished internal-combustion engine--are often only half-right, if
that. Kirsch urges that those concerned with analyzing the wherefores of the past take into
consideration multiple causes, and not always the most apparent ones. The automobile, he
continues, is not simply a machine, but "a material embodiment of the dynamic interaction of
consumers and producers, private and public institutions, existing and potential capabilities,
and prevailing ideas about gender, health, and the environment." In short, the automobile is
a system unto itself, and how it came to take its present form--unchanged in many respects for a
hundred years--is a story that involves many episodes.
Kirsch's account of some of those episodes provides a solid case study for students of technological history, and for those who press for new means of transportation in the new century. --Gregory McNamee
- Paperback: 291 pages
- Publisher: Rutgers University Press, 2000
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0813528089,
- ISBN-13: 978-0813528083
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