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Equipping James Bond
Guns, Gadgets, and Technological Enthusiasm

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor André Millard is a professor of history at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author of Beatlemania: Technology, Business, and Teen Culture in Cold War America and Magic City Nights: Birmingham's Rock 'n' Roll Years . Klappentext James Bond's amazing gadgets reveal both enthusiasm about technology and fear of its potential ramifications. The popularity of the 007 franchise depends on a seductive formula of sex, violence, and snobbery. Much of its appeal, too, lies in its gadgets: slick, somewhat improbable technological devices that give everyone's favorite secret agent the edge over his adversaries. In Equipping James Bond , André Millard chronicles a hundred-year history of espionage technology through the lens of Ian Fleming's infamous character and his ingenious spyware. Beginning with the creation of MI6, the British secret service, Millard traces the development of espionage technology from the advanced weaponry of the nineteenth century to the evolving threat of computer hacking and surveillance. Arguing that the gadgets in the books and films articulate the leading edge of technological awareness at the time, Millard describes how Bond goes from protecting 1950s England from criminal activity to saving a world threatened by nuclear bombs, poison gas, and attacks from space. As a modern and modernizing hero, Bond has to keep up with the times. His film franchise is committed to equipping both Bond and his adversaries with the latest technological gadgets. Simultaneously, Millard stresses, the villains and threats that Bond faces embody contemporary fears about the downside of technological change. Taking a wide-ranging look at factual (and fictional) technology, Millard views the James Bond universe as evidence for popular perceptions of technological development as both inevitably progressive and apocalyptically threatening. Zusammenfassung Taking a wide-ranging look at factual (and fictional) technology! Millard views the James Bond universe as evidence for popular perceptions of technological development as both inevitably progressive and apocalyptically threatening. ...

Product details

Authors André Millard, A. J. Millard, AndrT Millard, Andre (University of Alabama At Birmingha Millard, Andre (University of Alabama at Birmingham) Millard, Andre Millard
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
 
Content Book
Product form Hardback
Publication date 30.11.2018
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Technology > General, dictionaries
 
EAN 9781421426648
ISBN 978-1-4214-2664-8
Pages 224
 
Subjects Technikgeschichte, Literaturwissenschaft, Radio, Geheimdienst, Filmgenres, Geschichte der Naturwissenschaften, Spion, TV, Gattung, Literaturwissenschaft: 1900 bis 2000, Spionage und Geheimdienste, True Crime, Fernsehen, TV, Atomwaffen, Agent, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Intelligence & Espionage, Wissenschaftsgeschichte (Naturwissenschaften), Fernsehen - Privatfernsehen, Rundfunk - Privater Rundfunk, Radio / Rundfunk, Hörfunk, Geheimdienst / Spionage, Spionage - Spionageabwehr, Verbrechen / Kriminalfälle, Kriminalgeschichte - Kriminalgeschichten, Chemische und biologische Waffen, Technik / Geschichte, Museen, Sehenswürdigkeiten, Radiotechnik, Atombombe - Atomwaffe, True Crime / Espionage, TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / History, B-Waffe - Biologische Waffe - Biowaffe, History of engineering and technology, Literary studies: from c 1900 -, Espionage & secret services, History of engineering & technology, Nuclear weapons, Espionage and secret services, Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000, Film: styles & genres, Film: styles and genres, Chemical & biological weapons, Chemical and biological weapons
 

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