User:Esbenson:Environmental history

user:esbenson

Overviews and Manifestos
 * Bailes, Environmental History: Critical Issues in Comparative Perspective (1985).
 * Brimblecombe & Pfister, The Silent Countdown (1990)
 * Cronon, "Modes of Prophecy and Production: Placing Nature in History" (1990)
 * Cronon, "A Place for Stories: Nature, History, and Narrative" (1992)
 * Cronon, Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature (1996)
 * Crosby, “The Past and Present of Environmental History,” AHR 100 (1995)
 * Hays, “Toward Integration in Environmental History,” Pacific History Review (2001)
 * Hays, Explorations in Environmental History: Essays by Samuel P. Hays.
 * Hughes, "Global Dimensions of Environmental History," Pacific Historical Review (2001)
 * Merchant, Columbia Guide to Environmental History
 * Merchant, Major Problems in American Environmental History
 * Merchant, “Gender and Environmental History,” JAH 76 (1990)
 * Norwood, “Disturbed Landscape / Disturbing Processes: Environmental History for the Twenty-First Century” (2001)
 * Russell, “Evolutionary History: Prospectus for a New Field” (2003)
 * Rome “What really matters in history”
 * Sauer, Land and Life: A Selection from the Writings of Carl Sauer (1963)
 * Steinberg, Down to Earth: Nature's Role in American History (2002)
 * Stewart, “Environmental history” (1998)
 * Stine & Tarr, “At the Intersection of Histories: Technology and the Environment,” T&C (1998).
 * Warren, ed., American Environmental History
 * White, "Environmental History, Ecology, and Meaning” (1990)
 * White, “Discovering Nature in North America” (1992)
 * White, “The Nationalization of Nature” (1999)
 * White, "'Are You an Environmentalist or Do You Work for a Living?'” (1994).
 * White, "Afterword: Environmental History: Watching a Historical Field Mature” (2001)
 * Worster, “Transformations of the Earth: Toward an Agroecological Perspective in History” (1990)
 * Worster, “History as Natural History: An Essay on Theory and Method” (1984)
 * Worster, “Seeing Beyond Culture” (1990)
 * Worster, Donald, ed., The Ends of the Earth (1988)
 * Worster, Donald. The Wealth of Nature: Environmental History and the Ecological Imagination

Big Pictures: World History and the Longue Duree
 * Redman, Human Impact (1999)
 * Marsh, Man and Nature
 * Roberts, The Holocene
 * Thomas, Man's Role (1956)
 * Richards, Unending Frontier
 * Braudel, Mediterranean
 * Fernández-Armesto, Civilizations: Culture, Ambition, and the Transformation of Nature (2001)
 * McNeill, Something New
 * McNeill, Plagues and Peoples
 * McNeill & McNeill, The Human Web
 * Mithen, After the Ice
 * Pielou, After the Ice Age
 * Spier, Structure of Big History
 * Crosby, Ecological Imperialism
 * Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel
 * Diamond, Collapse
 * Hughes, “Global dimensions”
 * Davis, Late Victorian Holocaust
 * Pomeranz, Great Divergence
 * Flannery, The Future Eaters
 * Flannery, The Eternal Frontier
 * Wallerstein, Modern World-System
 * Frank, ReOrient

Famine, Disease, and Disaster
 * Johns, Dreadful Visitations
 * Purchase, Out of Nowhere
 * Rosen, Limits of Power
 * McGuire, Apocalypse
 * Voltaire, Candide
 * Steinberg, Acts of God
 * Pyne, Year of the Fires
 * Sen, Poverty and Famines
 * Beck, Risk Society
 * Zebrowski, Perils of a Restless Planet
 * Davis, Ecology of Fear
 * Fortun, Advocacy After Bhopal
 * Petryna, Life Exposed
 * Perrow, Normal Accidents
 * Erikson, New Species of Trouble [WID: out]
 * Davis, Late Victorian Holocaust
 * O Grada, Black '47 and Beyond (1999)
 * O Grada, The Great Irish Famine (1995)
 * McNeill, Plagues and Peoples
 * Crosby, The Columbian Exchange
 * Jones, “Virgin soils revisited”
 * Watts, Epidemics and History
 * Fenn, Pox Americana
 * Defoe, Journal of the Plague Year
 * Herlihy, Black Death and the Transformation of the West
 * Chaplin, Subject Matter
 * Curtin, Death by Migration
 * Curtin, Disease and Empire
 * Mitchell, Rule of Experts
 * Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel
 * Halliday, Great Stink of London
 * Hopkins, Princes and Peasants
 * Headrick, Tools of Empire
 * Rosenberg, Cholera Years
 * Valencius, Health of the Country
 * Mitman, “Hay fever holiday”
 * Swabe, Animals, Disease, and Human Society
 * Martin, Keepers of the Game
 * Krech, Ecological Indian
 * Wilkinson, Animals and Disease
 * Torrey & Yolkin, Beasts of the Earth
 * Landstrom, “Australian rabbit calcivirus program”
 * Craddock, City of Plagues
 * Wailoo, Dying in the City of the Blues
 * Engels, Condition of the Working Class in England
 * Ritvo, “Mad cow mysteries”

Nature and Empire
 * Mackenzie, Empire of Nature
 * Mackenzie, Empires of nature and the nature of empire
 * Brockway, Science and colonial expansion
 * Osborne, Nature, the exotic, and the science of French colonialism
 * Drayton, Nature's Government
 * Grove, Green Imperialism
 * Barton, Empire Forestry
 * Koerber, Linnaeus: Nature and Nation
 * Anker, Imperial Ecology
 * Boomgaard, Frontiers of Fear
 * Burnett, Masters of All They Surveyed
 * Edney, Mapping an Empire
 * Mitchell, Rule of Experts
 * Watts, Epidemics and History
 * Chaplin, Subject Matter
 * Cook, Journals of Captain Cook
 * Corbett, Man-Eaters of Kumaon
 * Orwell, “Shooting an elephant”
 * Haraway, “Teddy-bear patriarchy”
 * Mitman, Reel Nature
 * Crosby, Ecological Imperialism
 * Anderson, Creatures of Empire
 * Melville, Plague of Sheep
 * Calloway, New Worlds for All
 * Curtin, Death by Migration
 * Darwin, Voyage of the Beagle
 * Adas, Machines as the Measure of Men
 * Headrick, Tools of Empire
 * Mancall, Envisioning America
 * Miller & Reill, eds., Visions of Empire
 * Mintz, Sweetness and Power
 * White, Middle Ground
 * Worster, Rivers of Empire
 * Johns, Dreadful Visitations
 * MacLeod & Lewis, eds., Disease, Medicine, and Empire
 * Dunlap, Nature and the English Diaspora
 * Curtin, Disease and Empire
 * Cittadino, Nature as the Laboratory
 * Griffiths & Robin, Ecology and Empire
 * Cronon, Changes in the Land
 * Thongchai, Siam Mapped

Rural Landscapes: Farms, Forests, Parks, Frontiers Urban and Suburban Landscapes Conservation and Environmentalism Environmental Sciences
 * Slotkin, Regeneration Through Violence
 * Olwig, “Recovering the Substantive Nature of Landscape”
 * Olwig, Landscape, Nature, and the Body Politic
 * Judd, Common Lands, Common People
 * White, Organic Machine
 * White, Land Use, Environment, and Social Change
 * Basso, Wisdom Sits in Places
 * L. Marx, Machine in the Garden
 * Cosgrove, Social formation and symbolic landscape
 * Cronon, Changes in the Land
 * Stilgoe, Common Landscape
 * Merchant, Ecological Revolutions
 * Fiege, Irrigated Eden
 * McCullough, Landscape of Community
 * Totman, Green Archipelago
 * Donohue, Great Meadow
 * Worster, Rivers of Empire
 * Worster, Dust Bowl
 * Hoskins, Making of the English Landscape
 * Kirby, Poquosin
 * Stewart, “What nature suffers to groe”
 * Kolodny, Lay of the Land
 * Smith, Virgin Land
 * Turner, “Significance of the frontier”
 * Kuletz, Tainted Desert
 * Lekan, Imagining the Nation in Nature
 * Lekan & Zeller, eds., Germany's Nature
 * Lowood, “Calculating forester”
 * Magoc, Yellowstone
 * McCally, Everglades
 * Grove, Green Imperialism
 * Gadgil & Guha, This Fissured Land
 * Pritchard, “Meaning of nature”
 * Nye, Technologies of Landscape
 * Nye, American Technological Sublime
 * Pyne, Fire in America
 * Pyne, Burning Bush
 * Sutter, Driven Wild
 * Hays, Beauty, Health, and Permanence
 * Rollins, A Greener Vision of Home
 * Steinberg, Down to Earth
 * Cronon, Nature's Metropolis
 * Turkel, Archive of Place
 * Ritvo, “Fighting for Thirlmere—the roots of environmentalism”
 * Tyrrell, True Gardens of the Gods
 * Valencius, Health of the Country
 * Vileisis, Discovering the Unknown Landscape
 * Fitzgerald, Every Farm a Factory
 * Russell, War on Nature
 * Isenberg, Mining California
 * Schama, Landscape and Memory
 * Rome, “William Whyte”
 * Rome, “Building on the land”
 * Jackson, Crabgrass Frontier
 * Sugrue, Origins of the Urban Crisis
 * Hirsch, Making the Second Ghetto
 * Williams, Notes on the Underground
 * Mumford, Pentagon of Power
 * Mumford, Technics and Civilization
 * Cronon, Nature's Metropolis
 * Hays, Beauty, Health, and Permanence
 * Rome, Bulldozer in the Countryside
 * Davis, City of Quartz
 * Davis, Ecology of Fear
 * Steinberg, Down to Earth
 * Spirn, Granite Garden
 * Diefendorf & Dorsey, City, Country, Empire
 * Domosh, Invented Cities
 * Rosenzweig & Blackmar, The Park and the People
 * Stilgoe, Metropolitan Corridor
 * Mosley, Chimney of the World
 * Schuyler, New Urban Landscape
 * Tarr, ed., Devastation and Renewal
 * Hurley, Environmental Inequalities
 * Stephenson, Visions of Eden
 * Platt, Shock Cities
 * Marsh, Man and Nature
 * Ritvo, “Fighting for Thirlmere—the roots of environmentalism”
 * Rollins, A Greener Vision of Home
 * Hays, Beauty, Health, and Permanence
 * Rome, Bulldozer in the Countryside
 * Sears, Sacred Places
 * Shabecoff, Fierce Green Fire
 * Sale, Green Revolution
 * Price, Flight Maps
 * Rome, “'Give Earth a Chance'”
 * Worster, American Environmentalism
 * Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind
 * Oelschlaeger, The Idea of Wilderness
 * Bess, Light-Green Society
 * Flippen, Nixon and the Environment
 * Hays, Conservation and the Gospel of Efficiency
 * Kirk, Collecting Nature
 * McPhee, Encounters with the Archdruid
 * Weiner, A Little Corner of Freedom
 * Meine, “Conservation biology”
 * Zakin, Coyotes and Town Dogs
 * Abbey, The Monkey Wrench Gang
 * Abbey, Desert Solitaire
 * Huffman, Protectors of the Land and Water
 * Barton, Empire Forestry
 * Grove, Green Imperialism
 * Drayton, Nature's Government
 * Donohue, Great Meadow
 * Judd, Common Lands, Common People
 * McCullough, Landscape of Community
 * Cronon, “Trouble with wilderness”
 * Gottlieb, Forcing the Spring
 * Hardin, “Tragedy of the commons”
 * Ehrlich, Population Bomb
 * Helvarg, War against the Greens
 * Bramwell, Ecology
 * Stoll, Larding the Lean Earth
 * Runte, National Parks
 * Weiner, Models of Nature
 * O'Neill, Firecracker Boys
 * Mitman, “When nature is the zoo”
 * McEvoy, Fisherman's Problem
 * Jacoby, Crimes against Nature
 * Thompson, Whigs and Hunters
 * Warren, Hunter's Game
 * Trefethen, American Crusade
 * Reiger, American Sportsmen
 * Botkin, Discordant Harmonies
 * Meine, “Conservation biology”
 * Jordanova, ed., Images of the Earth
 * Doel. “Constituting the postwar earth sciences”
 * Mitman, “When nature is the zoo”
 * Weart, Discovery of Global Warming
 * Rosenberg, No Other Gods
 * Pritchard, “Meaning of nature”
 * Kohler, Landscapes and Labscapes
 * Kingsland, Modeling Nature
 * Mitman, State of Nature
 * Tobey, Saving the Prairies
 * Bocking, Ecology and Environmental Politics
 * Hagen, Entangled Bank
 * Palladino, “Defining ecology”
 * Worster, Nature's Economy
 * Pritchard, Preserving Yellowstone's Natural Conditions
 * Barrow, Passion for Birds
 * Allen, Naturalist in Britain
 * Mukerji, Fragile Power
 * Dalton et al., eds., Critical Masses
 * Farber, Discovering Birds
 * Farber, Finding Order in Nature
 * Livingstone, Nathaniel Southgate Shaler

Human-Animal Relations
 * Fudge, “A left-handed blow”
 * Fudge, Renaissance Beasts
 * Hoage & Deiss, eds., New Worlds, New Animals
 * Rothfels, Savages and Beasts
 * Haraway, Primate Visions
 * Haraway, Companion Species Manifesto
 * Robbins, Elephant Slaves and Pampered Parrots
 * Ritvo, Animal Estate
 * Ritvo, Platypus
 * Isenberg, Destruction of the Bison
 * Kohler, Lords of the Fly
 * Rader, Making Mice
 * Rupke, ed., Vivisection
 * French, Anti-vivisection
 * Mason, Civilized Creatures
 * Hanson, Animal Attractions
 * Sewell, Black Beauty
 * Lott, American Bison
 * Herman, Hunting and the American Imagination
 * Mackenzie, Empire of Nature
 * Corbett, Man-Eaters of Kumaon
 * Boomgaard, Frontiers of Fear
 * Quammen, Monster of God
 * Mitman & Daston, eds., Thinking with Animals
 * Wolch & Emel, Animal Geographies
 * Geertz, “Deep play”
 * Anderson, “Animal domestication in geographical perspective”
 * Taylor, Making Salmon
 * McEvoy, Fisherman's Problem
 * Jacoby, Crimes against Nature
 * Thompson, Whigs and Hunters
 * Warren, Hunter's Game
 * Trefethen, American Crusade
 * Reiger, American Sportsmen
 * Harway, “Animal sociology”
 * Guerrini, Experimenting
 * Shepard, The Others
 * Wilson, Domestication of the Human Species
 * Tuan, Dominance and Affection
 * Kete, Beast in the Boudoir
 * Shaler, Domesticated Animals
 * Midgley, Beast and Man
 * Ingold, “Humanity and Animality”
 * Clutton-Brock, ed., The Walking Larder
 * Clutton-Brock, Domesticated Animals from Early Times
 * Clutton-Brock, Natural History of Domesticated Mammals
 * Budiansky, Covenant of the Wild
 * Baker, Picturing the Beast
 * Darnton, Great Cat Massacre
 * Delort, Les animaux ont une histoire
 * Brightman, Grateful Prey
 * Burkhardt, “Constructing the zoo”
 * Carbone, What Animals Want
 * Cartmill, View to a Death in the Morning
 * Singer, Animal Liberation
 * Regan, Case for Animal Rights
 * Coleman, Vicious
 * Dunlap, Saving America's Wildlife
 * Crosby, Ecological Imperialism
 * Anderson, Creatures of Empire
 * Melville, Plague of Sheep
 * Davis, Spectacular Nature
 * Darwin, Origin of Species
 * Derry, Bred for Perfection
 * Mighetto, Wild Animals and American Environmental Ethics
 * Donohue, Great Meadow
 * Henninger-Voss, ed., Animals in Human Histories
 * Jones, Wolf Mountains
 * Lansbury, Old Brown Dog
 * Lederer, “Political animals”
 * Lynch, “Sacrifice”
 * Ritvo, “Plus ca change”

Non-U.S. and Comparative Perspectives
 * Pyne, Burning Bush
 * Lekan, Imagining the Nation in Nature
 * Lekan & Zeller, eds., Germany's Nature
 * McCann, Green Land, Brown Land
 * McCann, Maize and Grace
 * Madgil & Guha, This Fissured Land
 * Beinart, Environment and History
 * Beinart, Rise of Conservation in South Africa
 * Totman, Green Archipelago
 * Tyrrell, True Garden of the Gods
 * Flannery, Future Eaters
 * Flannery, Eternal Frontier
 * Hoskins, Making of the English Landscape