With impressive detail and wide-ranging erudition, Jütte charts the history of a single material, glass, as a product of human ingenuity developed across centuries.James Gleick, New York Review of Books
A remarkable achievementa work of stunning range and erudition. Revelation upon revelation follow in ways that readers will find dazzling and unexpected: very quickly the history of glass and transparency opens up into a much wider vista than the reader ever could have anticipated.Darrin M. McMahon, Dartmouth College
Glass is something we rarely look at, transparency something we almost never achieve. Daniel Jüttes novel account of their fraught entanglement from ancient Rome to the present is a tour de force: lucid, surprising, and consistently illuminating.David Armitage, Harvard University
This enthralling book opens a window onto windows: what theyre made of and what they mean. The long history of piercing walls to let in light is rich in lessons about the aesthetics of light and shadow, the politics of privacy and publicity, and the economics of glitzy glasswhether in the stained glass of a medieval cathedral or the reflecting glass of a soaring skyscraper. Daniel Jüttes long history of transparency is an object lesson in how matter can become metaphor.Lorraine Daston, director emerita, Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
Astonishingly erudite and global in embrace, Jütte examines a crucial concept across history, both in thought and, more important, embedded concretelyas building material. A remarkable marriage of intellectual and architectural history.Peter Baldwin, University of California at Los Angeles
This world history of the glass window across millennia will take you by surprise and make you think about the material bases of one of the key cultural metaphors of our time. An elegant and fascinating book.Francesca Trivellato, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton Daniel Jütte is already known for a brilliant study of thresholds and power in western history. Transparency presents an equally brilliant history of windows and their associations with both surveillance and democracy, from ancient Rome to the present.Peter Burke, Emmanuel College, Cambridge Enthralling. Jüttes book will make you think differently about Western history, architecture, art, literature, and your very surroundings. Full of surprises, brilliantly conceptualized, impressively researched, a joy to read and feast for the eyes, it ranks among the best works on material history and cultural studies.Ulinka Rublack, St. Johns College, Cambridge