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The wealth of nature : environmental history and the ecological imagination  Cover Image Book Book

The wealth of nature : environmental history and the ecological imagination

Summary: "Hailed as "one of the most eminent environmental historians of the West" by Alan Brinkley in The New York Times Book Review, Donald Worster has been a leader in reshaping the study of American history. Winner of the prestigious Bancroft Prize for his book Dust Bowl, Worster has helped bring humanity's interaction with nature to the forefront of historical thinking. Now, in The Wealth of Nature, he offers a series of thoughtful, eloquent essays which lay out his views on environmental history, tying the study of the past to today's agenda for change." "The Wealth of Nature captures the fruit of what Worster calls "my own intellectual turning to the land." History, he writes, represents a dialogue between humanity and nature - though it is usually reported as if it were simple dictation. Worster takes as his point of departure the approach expressed early on by Aldo Leopold, who stressed the importance of nature in determining human history, Leopold pointed out that the spread of bluegrass in Kentucky, for instance, created new pastures and fed the rush of American settlers across the Appalachians, which affected the contest between Britain, France, and the U.S. for control of the area. Worster's own work offers an even more subtly textured understanding, noting in this example, for instance, that bluegrass itself was an import from the Old World which supplanted native vegetation - a form of "environmental imperialism." He ranges across such areas as agriculture, water development, and other questions, examining them as environmental issues, showing how they have affected - and continue to affect - human settlement. Environmental history, he argues, is not simply the history of rural and wilderness areas; cities clearly have a tremendous impact on the land, on which they depend for their existence. He argues for a comprehensive approach to understanding our past as well as our present in environmental terms."

Record details

  • ISBN: 0195076249
  • ISBN: 9780195076240
  • ISBN: 0195092643
  • ISBN: 9780195092646
  • Physical Description: print
    x, 255 pages ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: New York : Oxford University Press, 1993.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Book of essays which previously appeared in various journals or books or given as lectures.
Bibliography, etc. Note: Includes bibliographical references (p. 221-243) and index.
Formatted Contents Note: The nature we have lost -- Paths across the levee -- History as natural history -- Transformation of the earth -- Arranging a marriage: ecology and agriculture -- A sense of soil -- Good farming and the public good -- Private, public, personal: Americans and the land -- The kingdom, the power, and the water -- Thinking like a river -- An end to ecstasy -- The shaky ground of sustainable development -- The ecology of order and chaos -- Restoring a natural order -- John Muir and the roots of American environmentalism -- The wealth of nature.
Subject: Human ecology United States History
Landscape assessment United States History
Environment Effects of Humans
Ecologie

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Northwest Indian College.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Lummi Library GF 503 .W67 1993 229911 Stacks Available -

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