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Zeppelin!

Germany and the Airship, 1900–1939

Guillaume de Syon

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An absorbing chronicle of the elegant airborne leviathan that at the beginning of the 20th century promised to revolutionize luxury travel, scientific exploration, and warfare.

"Whenever the airship flew over a village, or whenever she flew over a lonely field on which some peasants were working, a tremendous shout of joy rose up in the air towards Count Zeppelin's miracle ship which, in the imagination of all who saw her, suggested some supernatural creature." As this paean to the Zeppelin from an early-20th-century issue of the German newspaper Thüringer Zeitung makes clear, the airship...

An absorbing chronicle of the elegant airborne leviathan that at the beginning of the 20th century promised to revolutionize luxury travel, scientific exploration, and warfare.

"Whenever the airship flew over a village, or whenever she flew over a lonely field on which some peasants were working, a tremendous shout of joy rose up in the air towards Count Zeppelin's miracle ship which, in the imagination of all who saw her, suggested some supernatural creature." As this paean to the Zeppelin from an early-20th-century issue of the German newspaper Thüringer Zeitung makes clear, the airship inspired a unique sense of awe. These phenomenal rigid, lighter-than-air craft—the invention of Ferdinand Graf von Zeppelin (1838-1917)—approached the size of a small village. Although they moved slowly, there was no mistaking their exciting—or ominous—potential. Friends of the machine believed that it would revolutionize commerce, carry scientists to otherwise inaccessible places, and deliver bombs with great accuracy. Before the airplane proved its reliability and superior practicality—and before the fiery crash of the Hindenburg in 1937—Zeppelins made a deep impression on the minds of Europeans, especially in Germany.

In Zeppelin! Guillaume de Syon offers a captivating history of this technological wonder, from development and production to its impact on German culture and society. De Syon chronicles the various ways in which the airships were used—transport, war, exploration, and propaganda—and details the attempts by successive German governments—autocratic, democratic, fascist— to co-opt Count Zeppelin's invention. Between 1900 and 1939, Germans saw the Zeppelin as a symbol of national progress, and de Syon uses the airship to better understand the dynamics of German society and the place of technology within it. Though few people actually flew in any of the 119 Zeppelins built, the rigid airship made one of the strongest impressions of any flying machine on Europe's collective memory. Six decades later, there is still a mystique surrounding these technological leviathans, one that Zeppelin! addresses with insight and wit.

Reviews

Reviews

A fascinating case study of the intersection of technology and culture [which] concentrates on the question of why the Zeppelin exercised such a powerful influence on the popular imagination. De Syon uses interesting contemporary photographs and cartoons to support his argument.

In this comprehensive work, Guillaume de Syon manages to express in clear and concise terms the importance of the zeppelin to Germany and the rest of the Western world... Zeppelin! fills the gap in the history of powered lighter-than-air flight, as well as in the history of early flight's effects on culture.

Zeppelin! imparts the feeling of a youthful enthusiastic author, who must have begun his research, if not obsession, while still young. De Syon has produced a charming, factually complete history of the machine and the 'Zeppelin sublime.'.

In Zeppelin! Guillaume de Syon offers a captivating history of this technological wonder, from development and production to its impact on German culture and society.

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Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
5.8125
x
8.9375
Pages
312
ISBN
9780801886348
Illustration Description
33 halftones, 5 line drawings
Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction. Visions of the Sublime
Chapter 1. Balloons into Dirigibles
Chapter 2. The Machine above the Garden: Airship Culture in Imperial Germany
Chapter 3. Zeppelin Reality and Myth

Acknowledgments
Introduction. Visions of the Sublime
Chapter 1. Balloons into Dirigibles
Chapter 2. The Machine above the Garden: Airship Culture in Imperial Germany
Chapter 3. Zeppelin Reality and Myth in the Great War
Chapter 4. The Airship as a Business Tool in Weimar Culture
Chapter 5. Ideologies of Science and Adventure: The Artic Airship
Chapter 6. Political Zeppelinism: Manipulating Airship Culture, 1933-1939
Conclusion
List of Abbreviations
Notes
Essay on Sources and Methods
Index

Author Bio
Guillaume de Syon
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Guillaume de Syon

Guillaume de Syon is an associate professor of history at Albright College and a history research associate at Franklin and Marshall College.