"This collection is full of superb scholarship that makes substantial contributions to our understanding of technology." (Technology and Culture) “By focusing exclusively on humanity’s unruly tools, this book opens a compelling ‘mosaic’ view of technology that tiles together everything from the wiles of Jacobean stagecraft to the terza rima utopias of Romantic poets (10). . . . The essays gathered in British Literature and Technology, 1600–1830 will hold broad interest for . . . anyone-critic, teacher, student-seeking tools to comprehend human intervention in the world.” (Eighteenth-Century Fiction) "British Literature and Technology, 1600–1830 has much to offer readers interested in the social history of technology and in literature and science studies more broadly." (Journal of British Studies) “In a series of wide-ranging, thought-provoking, and finely argued essays, this volume marks a major advance in studies of science and literature. By thinking about literature itself as a kind of technology, the collection represents interdisciplinary scholarship at its best.” - Jess Keiser (author of Nervous Fictions: Literary Form and the Enlightenment Origins of Neuroscience) “Innovative in concept, scope, and execution, Girten and Hanlon’s collection studies the rich interplay between literature and technology during the scientific revolution. Prefaced by a sophisticated introduction, this volume is necessary reading for students and scholars interested in literary studies, science, technology and society, and the history of science.” - Tita Chico (author of The Experimental Imagination: Literary Knowledge and Science in the British Enlightenment)