- 274 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
Danger Sound Klaxon! reveals the untold story of the Klaxon automobile horn, one of the first great electrical consumer technologies of the twentieth century. Although its metallic shriek at first shocked pedestrians, savvy advertising strategies convinced consumers across the United States and western Europe to adopt the shrill Klaxon horn as the safest signaling technology available in the 1910s. The widespread use of Klaxons in the trenches of World War I, however, transformed how veterans heard this car horn, and its traumatic association with gas attacks ultimately doomed this once ubiquitous consumer technology.
By charting the meteoric rise and eventual fall of the Klaxon, Matthew Jordan highlights how perceptions of sound-producing technologies are guided by, manipulated, and transformed through advertising strategies, public debate, consumer reactions, and governmental regulations. Jordan demonstrates in this fascinating history how consumers are led toward technological solutions for problems themselves created by technology.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Soundscapes and Schematics
- 1 Sound Competition: Make Way for the Automobile!
- 2 First Encounters: Sound in the Age of the Electrical Signal
- 3 Klaxon and the Rise of Modern Advertising
- 4 Klaxon and the Mutable Law of the Technology Business
- 5 Danger Sound Klaxon! Localizing the International Brand of the Future
- 6 Sounding the Alarm: Klaxon in the Trenches
- 7 Sidewalk Blues: The Klaxon in Diminuendo
- Conclusion: Quieting the Klaxon
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index