Mark D. Hersey, Ted Steinberg, Marco Armiero, Kevin C. Armitage, Brian C. Black
A Field on Fire: The Future of Environmental History
Herausgegeben:Hersey, Mark D.; Steinberg, Ted
Mark D. Hersey, Ted Steinberg, Marco Armiero, Kevin C. Armitage, Brian C. Black
A Field on Fire: The Future of Environmental History
Herausgegeben:Hersey, Mark D.; Steinberg, Ted
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Mark D. Hersey is associate professor of history at Mississippi State University where he directs the Center for the History of Agriculture, Science, and the Environment of the South. He is author of My Work Is That of Conservation: An Environmental Biography of George Washington Carver. Ted Steinberg is Adeline Barry Davee Distinguished Professor of History and professor of law at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of Gotham Unbound: The Ecological History of Greater New York American Green: The Obsessive Quest for a Perfect Lawn Down to Earth: Nature s Role in American History…mehr
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Mark D. Hersey is associate professor of history at Mississippi State University where he directs the Center for the History of Agriculture, Science, and the Environment of the South. He is author of My Work Is That of Conservation: An Environmental Biography of George Washington Carver. Ted Steinberg is Adeline Barry Davee Distinguished Professor of History and professor of law at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of Gotham Unbound: The Ecological History of Greater New York American Green: The Obsessive Quest for a Perfect Lawn Down to Earth: Nature s Role in American History Acts of God: The Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America and Nature Incorporated Industrialization and the Waters of New England.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Alabama Press
- First Edition
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 657g
- ISBN-13: 9780817320010
- ISBN-10: 0817320016
- Artikelnr.: 53067822
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: University of Alabama Press
- First Edition
- Seitenzahl: 328
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Januar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 657g
- ISBN-13: 9780817320010
- ISBN-10: 0817320016
- Artikelnr.: 53067822
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Mark D. Hersey is associate professor of history at Mississippi State University where he directs the Center for the History of Agriculture, Science, and the Environment of the South. He is author of My Work Is That of Conservation: An Environmental Biography of George Washington Carver. Ted Steinberg is Adeline Barry Davee Distinguished Professor of History and professor of law at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of Gotham Unbound: The Ecological History of Greater New York; American Green: The Obsessive Quest for a Perfect Lawn; Down to Earth: Nature’s Role in American History; Acts of God: The Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America; and Nature Incorporated; Industrialization and the Waters of New England.
1. List of Illustrations
2. Introduction: A Good Set of Walking Shoes by Mark D. Hersey
3. Part I. Facing Limits
4. Chapter 1. Subversive Subjects: Donald Worster and the Radical Origins of
Environmental History by Ted Steinberg
5. Chapter 2. Can Capitalism Ever Be Green? by Adam Rome
6. Chapter 3. Seeing Like a God: Environmentalism in the Anthropocene by Frank
Zelko
7. Chapter 4. The Locked Door: Thomas Midgley Jr., Chlorofluorocarbons, and
the Unintended Consequences of Technology by Kevin C. Armitage
8. Chapter 5. Malibu, California: Edenic Illusions and Natural Disasters by
Christof Mauch
9. Chapter 6. Energizing Environmental History by Brian C. Black
10. Part II. World without Borders
11. Chapter 7. The Force of Fiber: Reconnecting the Philippines with Latin
America and the American West via Transnational Environmental History by
Sterling Evans
12. Chapter 8. Hunting and Wilderness in the Creation of National Identities by
Mikko Saikku
13. Chapter 9. Why We Need Comparative History: The Case of China and the
United States by Shen Hou
14. Chapter 10. The World in a Tin Can: Migrants in Environmental History by
Marco Armiero
15. Chapter 11. Down in the Sky: The Promise of Aerial Environmental History by
Robert Wellman Campbell
16. Chapter 12. Rivers of Dust: An Environmental Historian Appraises the
American Legal System by Karl Boyd Brooks
17. Part III. Doing Environmental History
18. Chapter 13. Whole Earth without Borders: Earth Photographs, Space Data, and
the Importance of Visual Culture within Environmental History by Neil M.
Maher
19. Chapter 14. Beyond Stories: Geospatial Influences on the Practice of
Environmental History by Sara M. Gregg
20. Chapter 15. Low-Hanging Fruit: Science and Environmental History by Edmund
Russell
21. Chapter 16. The Watershed of War: Environmental History and the “Big Civil
War” by Brian Allen Drake
22. Chapter 17. War from the Ground Up: Integrating Military and Environmental
Histories by Lisa M. Brady
23. Afterword: The Distinctiveness of Environmental History by Daniel T.
Rodgers
24. Bibliography
25. About the Contributors
26. Index
2. Introduction: A Good Set of Walking Shoes by Mark D. Hersey
3. Part I. Facing Limits
4. Chapter 1. Subversive Subjects: Donald Worster and the Radical Origins of
Environmental History by Ted Steinberg
5. Chapter 2. Can Capitalism Ever Be Green? by Adam Rome
6. Chapter 3. Seeing Like a God: Environmentalism in the Anthropocene by Frank
Zelko
7. Chapter 4. The Locked Door: Thomas Midgley Jr., Chlorofluorocarbons, and
the Unintended Consequences of Technology by Kevin C. Armitage
8. Chapter 5. Malibu, California: Edenic Illusions and Natural Disasters by
Christof Mauch
9. Chapter 6. Energizing Environmental History by Brian C. Black
10. Part II. World without Borders
11. Chapter 7. The Force of Fiber: Reconnecting the Philippines with Latin
America and the American West via Transnational Environmental History by
Sterling Evans
12. Chapter 8. Hunting and Wilderness in the Creation of National Identities by
Mikko Saikku
13. Chapter 9. Why We Need Comparative History: The Case of China and the
United States by Shen Hou
14. Chapter 10. The World in a Tin Can: Migrants in Environmental History by
Marco Armiero
15. Chapter 11. Down in the Sky: The Promise of Aerial Environmental History by
Robert Wellman Campbell
16. Chapter 12. Rivers of Dust: An Environmental Historian Appraises the
American Legal System by Karl Boyd Brooks
17. Part III. Doing Environmental History
18. Chapter 13. Whole Earth without Borders: Earth Photographs, Space Data, and
the Importance of Visual Culture within Environmental History by Neil M.
Maher
19. Chapter 14. Beyond Stories: Geospatial Influences on the Practice of
Environmental History by Sara M. Gregg
20. Chapter 15. Low-Hanging Fruit: Science and Environmental History by Edmund
Russell
21. Chapter 16. The Watershed of War: Environmental History and the “Big Civil
War” by Brian Allen Drake
22. Chapter 17. War from the Ground Up: Integrating Military and Environmental
Histories by Lisa M. Brady
23. Afterword: The Distinctiveness of Environmental History by Daniel T.
Rodgers
24. Bibliography
25. About the Contributors
26. Index
1. List of Illustrations
2. Introduction: A Good Set of Walking Shoes by Mark D. Hersey
3. Part I. Facing Limits
4. Chapter 1. Subversive Subjects: Donald Worster and the Radical Origins of
Environmental History by Ted Steinberg
5. Chapter 2. Can Capitalism Ever Be Green? by Adam Rome
6. Chapter 3. Seeing Like a God: Environmentalism in the Anthropocene by Frank
Zelko
7. Chapter 4. The Locked Door: Thomas Midgley Jr., Chlorofluorocarbons, and
the Unintended Consequences of Technology by Kevin C. Armitage
8. Chapter 5. Malibu, California: Edenic Illusions and Natural Disasters by
Christof Mauch
9. Chapter 6. Energizing Environmental History by Brian C. Black
10. Part II. World without Borders
11. Chapter 7. The Force of Fiber: Reconnecting the Philippines with Latin
America and the American West via Transnational Environmental History by
Sterling Evans
12. Chapter 8. Hunting and Wilderness in the Creation of National Identities by
Mikko Saikku
13. Chapter 9. Why We Need Comparative History: The Case of China and the
United States by Shen Hou
14. Chapter 10. The World in a Tin Can: Migrants in Environmental History by
Marco Armiero
15. Chapter 11. Down in the Sky: The Promise of Aerial Environmental History by
Robert Wellman Campbell
16. Chapter 12. Rivers of Dust: An Environmental Historian Appraises the
American Legal System by Karl Boyd Brooks
17. Part III. Doing Environmental History
18. Chapter 13. Whole Earth without Borders: Earth Photographs, Space Data, and
the Importance of Visual Culture within Environmental History by Neil M.
Maher
19. Chapter 14. Beyond Stories: Geospatial Influences on the Practice of
Environmental History by Sara M. Gregg
20. Chapter 15. Low-Hanging Fruit: Science and Environmental History by Edmund
Russell
21. Chapter 16. The Watershed of War: Environmental History and the “Big Civil
War” by Brian Allen Drake
22. Chapter 17. War from the Ground Up: Integrating Military and Environmental
Histories by Lisa M. Brady
23. Afterword: The Distinctiveness of Environmental History by Daniel T.
Rodgers
24. Bibliography
25. About the Contributors
26. Index
2. Introduction: A Good Set of Walking Shoes by Mark D. Hersey
3. Part I. Facing Limits
4. Chapter 1. Subversive Subjects: Donald Worster and the Radical Origins of
Environmental History by Ted Steinberg
5. Chapter 2. Can Capitalism Ever Be Green? by Adam Rome
6. Chapter 3. Seeing Like a God: Environmentalism in the Anthropocene by Frank
Zelko
7. Chapter 4. The Locked Door: Thomas Midgley Jr., Chlorofluorocarbons, and
the Unintended Consequences of Technology by Kevin C. Armitage
8. Chapter 5. Malibu, California: Edenic Illusions and Natural Disasters by
Christof Mauch
9. Chapter 6. Energizing Environmental History by Brian C. Black
10. Part II. World without Borders
11. Chapter 7. The Force of Fiber: Reconnecting the Philippines with Latin
America and the American West via Transnational Environmental History by
Sterling Evans
12. Chapter 8. Hunting and Wilderness in the Creation of National Identities by
Mikko Saikku
13. Chapter 9. Why We Need Comparative History: The Case of China and the
United States by Shen Hou
14. Chapter 10. The World in a Tin Can: Migrants in Environmental History by
Marco Armiero
15. Chapter 11. Down in the Sky: The Promise of Aerial Environmental History by
Robert Wellman Campbell
16. Chapter 12. Rivers of Dust: An Environmental Historian Appraises the
American Legal System by Karl Boyd Brooks
17. Part III. Doing Environmental History
18. Chapter 13. Whole Earth without Borders: Earth Photographs, Space Data, and
the Importance of Visual Culture within Environmental History by Neil M.
Maher
19. Chapter 14. Beyond Stories: Geospatial Influences on the Practice of
Environmental History by Sara M. Gregg
20. Chapter 15. Low-Hanging Fruit: Science and Environmental History by Edmund
Russell
21. Chapter 16. The Watershed of War: Environmental History and the “Big Civil
War” by Brian Allen Drake
22. Chapter 17. War from the Ground Up: Integrating Military and Environmental
Histories by Lisa M. Brady
23. Afterword: The Distinctiveness of Environmental History by Daniel T.
Rodgers
24. Bibliography
25. About the Contributors
26. Index







