Clocks Are Telling Lies

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A01=Scott Alan Johnston
American
Annie Maunder
astronomy
Author_Scott Alan Johnston
British
business
Canadian history
Category=NHB
Category=PDX
Category=PGZ
Category=TBX
Charles Piazzi Smyth
Cleveland Abbe
computers
day
daylight savings
diplomacy
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_tech-engineering
George Airy
global
great pyramid
Greenwich
history
Indigenous
international meridian conference
John Couch Adams
Kikuchi Dairoku
local time
longitude
Martial Bourdin
metric system
prime meridian
railway time
royal observatory
Ruth Belville
Sandford Fleming
science
Simon Newcomb
standard
technology
time
time-sense
timekeeping
transit venus
universal
William Allen
William Chistie
William Parker Snow
zones

Product details

  • ISBN 9780228008439
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Jan 2022
  • Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • Publication City/Country: CA
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Until the nineteenth century all time was local time. On foot or on horseback, it was impossible to travel fast enough to care that noon was a few minutes earlier or later from one town to the next. The invention of railways and telegraphs, however, created a newly interconnected world where suddenly the time differences between cities mattered.

The Clocks Are Telling Lies is an exploration of why we tell time the way we do, demonstrating that organizing a new global time system was no simple task. Standard time, envisioned by railway engineers such as Sandford Fleming, clashed with universal time, promoted by astronomers. When both sides met in 1884 at the International Meridian Conference in Washington, DC, to debate the best way to organize time, disagreement abounded. If scientific and engineering experts could not agree, how would the public? Following some of the key players in the debate, Scott Johnston reveals how people dealt with the contradictions in global timekeeping in surprising ways – from zealots like Charles Piazzi Smyth, who campaigned for the Great Pyramid to serve as the prime meridian, to Maria Belville, who sold the time door to door in Victorian London, to Moraviantown and other Indigenous communities that used timekeeping to fight for autonomy.

Drawing from a wide range of primary sources, The Clocks Are Telling Lies offers a thought-provoking narrative that centres people and politics, rather than technology, in the vibrant story of global time telling.

Scott Alan Johnston is a historian of science and technology. He lives and writes in Hamilton, Ontario.

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