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About Time

About Time

A History of Civilization in Twelve Clocks

Summary

Brought to you by Penguin.

Since the dawn of civilisation, we have kept time. But time has always been against us.

From the city sundials of ancient Rome to the era of the smartwatch, clocks have been used throughout history to wield power, make money, govern citizens and keep control. Sometimes, also with clocks, we have fought back.

In About Time, time expert David Rooney tells the story of timekeeping, and how it continues to shape our modern world. In twelve chapters, demarcated like the hours of time, we meet the greatest inventions in horological history, from medieval water clocks to monumental sundials, and from coastal time signals to satellites in earth's orbit. We discover how clocks have helped us navigate the world, build empires and even taken us to the brink of destruction.

Over the course of this global journey Rooney demonstrates how each of these clocks has shone a spotlight onto human civilisation, and shows us the very real effects clocks continue to have on everything from capitalism, to politics, to our very identity.

This is the story of timing. And the story of timing is the story of us.

© David Rooney 2021 (P) Penguin Audio 2021

Reviews

  • 'About Time is an utterly dazzling book, the best piece of history I have read for a long time. From sundials in ancient Rome to astronomical, water-driven, mechanical and atomic timepieces used throughout history and across cultures, Rooney has written the definitive book on these remarkable objects that give order to everyday life. It is a moving and beautifully written book that even takes us 5,000 years into the future with plutonium clocks ticking away beneath our feet. There will be many puns about this as a timely book; in fact, it is timeless'
    Jerry Brotton, author of A History of the World in Twelve Maps

About the author

David Rooney

David Rooney is a British historian and museum curator. He was born in northeast England in 1974 to parents who ran a noted clock restoration business. He moved to London in 1995 to take a traineeship at the Science Museum, where he encountered – and was later responsible for – the aeroplane that won the Big Hop contest.

Over an almost thirty-year museum career, David has specialized in bringing historical stories vividly alive. As the Science Museum’s Keeper of Technology and Engineering, he led a team of ten specialist curators with combined responsibility for one-third of the museum’s vast collection and oversaw internationally significant artefacts ranging from art and aeronautics to space technology and nuclear power.


Among the exhibitions David curated was the critically acclaimed 2012 retrospective of the mathematician and codebreaker Alan Turing. David also curated the museum’s RIBA-award-winning mathematics gallery, designed by Dame Zaha Hadid, which opened in December 2016 and was widely commended.
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