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Distributed for University of London Press

Living with Machines

Computational Histories of the Age of Industry

A data-driven history of the coming of the machine age in the long nineteenth century, arising from one of the largest interdisciplinary projects undertaken in the humanities.

The world’s first industrial revolution in Britain resulted in an explosion in the creation and collection of documentary sources. Living with Machines harnesses the combined power of massive digitized historical collections, from maps to census returns, newspapers, and computational analytical tools to examine the ways in which technology altered the very fabric of human existence on a hitherto unprecedented scale.

Collaboratively written and developed through open community review, this book features an innovative open access edition enhanced with interactive maps, datasets, visualizations, digital notebooks, and multimedia content including video, audio, and images. Its experimental approach uses easily reproducible methods based on open-source code and linked to publicly available datasets.

Historians will find in this book a wealth of accessible material illuminating the human, social, and cultural consequences of this historical moment. For digital humanists, cultural heritage professionals, librarians, and archivists, it is a rich example of the potential and methods of making collections available for digital scholarship. At once an exploration of the extraordinary impact of technology on humanity in the age of industry and a powerful digital artifact itself, Living with Machines is an essential text at the cutting edge of digital history.
 

264 pages | 50 | 5.51 x 8.5 | © 2026

History: British and Irish History, European History


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Table of Contents

  • Introduction: Working with Machines
  • 1 The Environmental Scan as a method for digital source criticism
  • 2 The power of MapReader for understanding the human and ecological past
  • 3 Beyond the tracks: re-connecting people, places and stations in the history of late-Victorian railways
  • 4 Links in the chain: workers in the British bicycle boom, as seen from the England Wales census, 1881–1911
  • 5 Analysing the language of mechanisation in nineteenth-century British newspapers
  • 6 The language of accidents
  • 7 For the curious and the learned: broadening our understanding of digital infrastructures in GLAM
  • Afterword

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