Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony

When exchange telephony was first marketed to the British public by the early telephone companies in the late nineteenth century it was as an intuitive technology requiring no specialist knowledge or training. This has gone unquestioned in subsequent telephone historiography but, as this article dem...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dr Michael Kay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Science Museum, London 2015-05-01
Series:Science Museum Group Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.sciencemuseum.org.uk/browse/issue-03/troublesome-telephony/
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spelling doaj-630167240b1447baa96ea7712c4dbd6f2020-11-25T01:56:36ZengScience Museum, LondonScience Museum Group Journal2054-57702015-05-010310.15180/150308Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephonyDr Michael Kay0University of LeedsWhen exchange telephony was first marketed to the British public by the early telephone companies in the late nineteenth century it was as an intuitive technology requiring no specialist knowledge or training. This has gone unquestioned in subsequent telephone historiography but, as this article demonstrates, telephone instruments and systems were not always unproblematic or easy to use. Whilst other scholars have discussed important factors in the development and uptake of telephony, such as business economics and intellectual property, this article focuses on usage, and argues that difficulties in using telephone instruments and systems also influenced key changes in the operations of early British exchange systems. To understand these responses and developments it is necessary to look at the opinions and complaints of both users and non-users of telephone exchange systems. In investigating non-users as well as users, this article is influenced by the work of Sally Wyatt in Oudshoorn and Pinch's (2003) edited volume regarding users and non-users of technologies. Recovering the reactions of such people is possible through extensive use of letters received by the telephone companies or published in the periodical press, and opinions voiced at select committee meetings investigating the state of the country's telephone system. In recovering the difficulties early users and non-users faced when confronted with exchange telephone systems this article emphasises the importance of problematising the historical uptake of new technologies, and highlights how, in the case of early British telephony in particular, these problems can reveal specific facts both about historical telephone use-experience and about how exchange telephony spread around the country.http://journal.sciencemuseum.org.uk/browse/issue-03/troublesome-telephony/history of technologyhistory of telecommunicationstelephonyBritainsocial historynineteenth century
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dr Michael Kay
spellingShingle Dr Michael Kay
Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony
Science Museum Group Journal
history of technology
history of telecommunications
telephony
Britain
social history
nineteenth century
author_facet Dr Michael Kay
author_sort Dr Michael Kay
title Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony
title_short Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony
title_full Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony
title_fullStr Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony
title_full_unstemmed Troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early British exchange telephony
title_sort troublesome telephony: how users and non-users shaped the development of early british exchange telephony
publisher Science Museum, London
series Science Museum Group Journal
issn 2054-5770
publishDate 2015-05-01
description When exchange telephony was first marketed to the British public by the early telephone companies in the late nineteenth century it was as an intuitive technology requiring no specialist knowledge or training. This has gone unquestioned in subsequent telephone historiography but, as this article demonstrates, telephone instruments and systems were not always unproblematic or easy to use. Whilst other scholars have discussed important factors in the development and uptake of telephony, such as business economics and intellectual property, this article focuses on usage, and argues that difficulties in using telephone instruments and systems also influenced key changes in the operations of early British exchange systems. To understand these responses and developments it is necessary to look at the opinions and complaints of both users and non-users of telephone exchange systems. In investigating non-users as well as users, this article is influenced by the work of Sally Wyatt in Oudshoorn and Pinch's (2003) edited volume regarding users and non-users of technologies. Recovering the reactions of such people is possible through extensive use of letters received by the telephone companies or published in the periodical press, and opinions voiced at select committee meetings investigating the state of the country's telephone system. In recovering the difficulties early users and non-users faced when confronted with exchange telephone systems this article emphasises the importance of problematising the historical uptake of new technologies, and highlights how, in the case of early British telephony in particular, these problems can reveal specific facts both about historical telephone use-experience and about how exchange telephony spread around the country.
topic history of technology
history of telecommunications
telephony
Britain
social history
nineteenth century
url http://journal.sciencemuseum.org.uk/browse/issue-03/troublesome-telephony/
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