Electricity Lighting Liberty, August 1916 |
|
| Hugo Gernsback | |
| Categories | Science |
|---|---|
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Publisher | Hugo Gernsback |
| First issue | May 1913 |
| Final issue — Number |
July 1920 Vol 8 No 3 |
| Company | Experimenter Publishing |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
The Electrical Experimenter (OCLC 8740783) was a technical science magazine that was published monthly. It was first published in May 1913, as the successor to Modern Electrics, a combination of a magazine and mail-order catalog that had been published by Hugo Gernsback starting in 1908.[1] The Electrical Experimenter continued from May 1913 to July 1920 under that name, focusing on scientific articles about radio, and continued with a broader focus as Science and Invention until August 1931.[1]
The magazine was edited by Hugo Gernsback until March 1929, when the publishing empire of Sidney and Hugo Gernsback was forced into bankruptcy; after that date it was edited by Arthur H. Lynch.[2]
Under the editorship of Gernsback, it also published some early science fiction; he published several of his own stories in the magazine starting in 1915, and encouraged others through a 1916 editorial arguing that a "real electrical experimenter, worthy of the name" must have imagination and a vision for the future.[3] Between August 1917 and July 1919, Nikola Tesla wrote five articles in the magazine,[4] and also published parts of his autobiography in segments in several issues in 1919.
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References
- ^ a b Massie, Keith; Perry, Stephen D. (2002), "Hugo Gernsbeck and Radio Magazines: An Influential Intersection in Broadcast History", Journal of Radio Studies 9 (2): 264–282, http://home.utah.edu/~u0202363/hugo_pub.pdf.
- ^ Magazine Data File: Electrical Experimenter
- ^ Michael Ashley (2000). Time Machines: The Story of the Science-Fiction Pulp Magazines from the beginning to 1950. Liverpool University Press. pp. pp. 30–33. ISBN 0853238553.
- ^ Tesla Bibliography
External links
- magazineart.org
- Radio Detector Development, The Electrical Experimenter, January, 1917
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