2017
DOI: 10.1017/s1060150316000462
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Gods and Ghost-Light: Ancient Egypt, Electricity, and X-Rays

Abstract: In 1892 the celebrated physicistand chemist William Crookes commented on the existence of “an almost infinite range of ethereal vibrations or electrical rays,” which he believed could revolutionize telegraphic communications (174). A few years later, and aided by Crookes's experiments with vacuums, the German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen successfully produced X-rays, a hitherto unrecorded form of electromagnetic radiation, which he tantalizingly described as “a new kind of invisible light” (Röntgen 413; Warner 25… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Some works, like Edgar Allan Poe's Some Words with a Mummy (1845) and Grant Allen's My New Year's Eve Among the Mummies (1878), portrayed Egyptian civilization as having already achieved many of the Victorian era's advancements (like the steam engine and gaslamps) in an effort to satire the notion of progress. [109] Other works, like Jane Loudon's The Mummy! : Or a Tale of the Twenty-Second Century, satirized Victorian curiosities with the afterlife.…”
Section: Satire In Victorian Englandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some works, like Edgar Allan Poe's Some Words with a Mummy (1845) and Grant Allen's My New Year's Eve Among the Mummies (1878), portrayed Egyptian civilization as having already achieved many of the Victorian era's advancements (like the steam engine and gaslamps) in an effort to satire the notion of progress. [109] Other works, like Jane Loudon's The Mummy! : Or a Tale of the Twenty-Second Century, satirized Victorian curiosities with the afterlife.…”
Section: Satire In Victorian Englandmentioning
confidence: 99%