Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914

abstract: Beginning in 1905, American and European reporters, writers, and artists made pilgrimages to the hydroelectric Necaxa complex in southern Mexico. For the fossil-hungry Mexican nation, advances in hydraulic engineering had made the vision of an electrical-powered industrial future not just...

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Published in:Technology and Culture
Main Author: Montaño, Diana J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Project MUSE 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tech.2023.a903969
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spelling crjohnshopkinsun:10.1353/tech.2023.a903969 2023-12-10T09:51:26+01:00 Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914 Montaño, Diana J. 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tech.2023.a903969 en eng Project MUSE Technology and Culture volume 64, issue 3, page 677-705 ISSN 1097-3729 Engineering (miscellaneous) History journal-article 2023 crjohnshopkinsun https://doi.org/10.1353/tech.2023.a903969 2023-11-10T10:50:41Z abstract: Beginning in 1905, American and European reporters, writers, and artists made pilgrimages to the hydroelectric Necaxa complex in southern Mexico. For the fossil-hungry Mexican nation, advances in hydraulic engineering had made the vision of an electrical-powered industrial future not just desirable but also feasible. North Atlantic water technicians set out to redesign rivers that would power an electrified Mexico. Necaxa was no small, remote project. Its numerous innovations commanded the world's attention, which foreign writers used to recast European and North American ambitions. Through their accounts, these "technological pilgrims" turned Necaxa into a global hydropower imaginary. With foreign engineers in the leading roles, their romanticized narratives rhetorically naturalized the redesign of rivers and the enabling power relations. This article applies a sociotechnical imaginary lens and Necaxa as the case study to show the centrality of rhetorical frames paving the way for new energy technologies. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Johns Hopkins University Press (via Crossref) Technology and Culture 64 3 677 705
institution Open Polar
collection Johns Hopkins University Press (via Crossref)
op_collection_id crjohnshopkinsun
language English
topic Engineering (miscellaneous)
History
spellingShingle Engineering (miscellaneous)
History
Montaño, Diana J.
Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914
topic_facet Engineering (miscellaneous)
History
description abstract: Beginning in 1905, American and European reporters, writers, and artists made pilgrimages to the hydroelectric Necaxa complex in southern Mexico. For the fossil-hungry Mexican nation, advances in hydraulic engineering had made the vision of an electrical-powered industrial future not just desirable but also feasible. North Atlantic water technicians set out to redesign rivers that would power an electrified Mexico. Necaxa was no small, remote project. Its numerous innovations commanded the world's attention, which foreign writers used to recast European and North American ambitions. Through their accounts, these "technological pilgrims" turned Necaxa into a global hydropower imaginary. With foreign engineers in the leading roles, their romanticized narratives rhetorically naturalized the redesign of rivers and the enabling power relations. This article applies a sociotechnical imaginary lens and Necaxa as the case study to show the centrality of rhetorical frames paving the way for new energy technologies.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Montaño, Diana J.
author_facet Montaño, Diana J.
author_sort Montaño, Diana J.
title Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914
title_short Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914
title_full Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914
title_fullStr Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914
title_full_unstemmed Missionaries of Light and Progress in Mexico: Engineers and Technological Pilgrims Craft Necaxa Falls, 1890s–1914
title_sort missionaries of light and progress in mexico: engineers and technological pilgrims craft necaxa falls, 1890s–1914
publisher Project MUSE
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tech.2023.a903969
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Technology and Culture
volume 64, issue 3, page 677-705
ISSN 1097-3729
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1353/tech.2023.a903969
container_title Technology and Culture
container_volume 64
container_issue 3
container_start_page 677
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