Doctor of Philosophy, The Ohio State University, 2019, English
Although the first balloon flights in 1783 created a sensation throughout
Europe, human flight had long captured the imaginations of scientific and literary
authors alike. Prior histories of flight begin with balloons, but earlier centuries
boasted a strange and colorful aviary that shaped thinking about flight long before
the first balloon ever left the ground. Taking a cultural materialist approach
informed by a broad familiarity with the development of early flight machines and a
deep familiarity with the literary conventions of the period, I analyze historical
materials ranging from aeronautical treatises to stage pantomimes, from newspaper
advertisements to philosophical poems, from mechanical diagrams to satirical
cartoons. This earlier culture possessed high hopes and anxieties about human
flight. I argue that early flight was lively and varied before the invention of a
successful flying machine, and that these early flights were important because they
established an aerial tradition astonishingly resistant to change. Rather than
revolutionizing the culture, ballooning was quickly incorporated into it. Although
ballooning came to be regarded as a failure by many onlookers, the aerial tradition
had long become accustomed to failure and continued unabated. Human flight has
always promised tremendous and yet debatable utility, a paradox that continues
into the present age.
Committee: Roxann Wheeler (Advisor); David Brewer (Committee Member); Sandra Macpherson (Committee Member); Jacob Risinger (Committee Member)
Subjects: Aeronomy; Aerospace Engineering; American Literature; Astronomy; British and Irish Literature; Comparative Literature; Engineering; European History; European Studies; Experiments; Folklore; Foreign Language; Germanic Literature; History; Language; Literature; Mechanical Engineering; Museums; Philosophy of Science; Physics; Science History; Technology; Theater; Theater History; World History