The Forgotten Voice: Antonio Meucci and the Origins of Telecommunication Technology
Year: 2025
Authors: Meucci Riccardo
Autors Affiliation: CNR, Ist Nazl Ott Applicata, Largo E Fermi 6, I-50125 Florence, Italy; Univ Firenze, Dipartimento Fis & Astron, Florence, Italy.
Abstract: Antonio Meucci, a largely overlooked pioneer in telecommunications, played a foundational role in the development of long-distance voice transmission. Yet his contributions have often been marginalized in dominant techno-historical narratives, particularly when compared to Alexander Graham Bell. This paper reexamines Meucci’s invention of the telettrofono through both historical and technological lenses, tracing the continuity between his early electromechanical devices and the architectures embedded in today’s smartphones. By situating Meucci’s work within the broader contexts of the historical record, cultural memory, and historiography of sound technologies, we highlight how competing narratives of innovation emerge and persist. Drawing on both classical accounts of telephone history and contemporary analyses of media and communication, we argue that Meucci’s legacy is not only technical but also symbolic of the ways recognition and omission shape our understanding of innovation. The trajectory from the telettrofono to the smartphone thus illustrates both the resilience of core scientific principles and the evolving cultural frameworks through which inventors are remembered-or forgotten.
Journal/Review: FOUNDATIONS OF SCIENCE
More Information: Open access funding provided by Consiglio Nazionale Delle Ricerche (CNR) within the CRUI-CARE Agreement.KeyWords: Antonio Meucci; Telephone history; Telecommunication; Innovation; Historiography; Cultural memoryDOI: 10.1007/s10699-025-10019-y

