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| biblioscope: An Archival Guide & Bibliography | Environmental History, 11.1 | The History Cooperative
11.1  
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January, 2006
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biblioscope

AN ARCHIVAL GUIDE & BIBLIOGRAPHY

ARTICLES


Adler, Jerry. "Charles Darwin: Evolution of a Scientist." Newsweek 146 (22 2005): 50–58. Examines the personal life and views of Charles Darwin on the relationship between his evolutionary theories and religion. Written in context of the 2005 popular debate over evolution vs. "intelligent design."

Allison, R. Bruce. "Every Root an Anchor: Wisconsin's Famous and Historic Trees." Wisconsin Magazine of History 89 (Autumn 2005): 42–45. Excerpt from book of the same title (Wisconsin Historical Society Press, 2005) containing sketches of some of the state's noteworthy and historic trees, including giant elms dating from as early as the 16th century killed by Dutch Elm disease in the 1950s, and an oak at the Durand Courthouse which figured in an 1881 lynching.

Andersson, Rikard, Lars Östlund, and Erik Törnlund. "The Last European Landscape to be Colonised: A Case Study of Land-Use Change in the Far North of Sweden 1850–1930." Environment and History 11 (August 2005): 193–318. Examines the agricultural colonization of the interior of northern Sweden in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, analyzing the rapid land-use transition from nomadic to agricultural with particular focus on the late 1800s.

Anker, Peder. "The Bauhaus of Nature." Modernism/modernity 12 (2 2005): 229–251. Examines interactions between ecology and the Bauhaus school of design founded by Walter Gropius in early-twentieth-century Germany, arguing that both groups believed the human household should be modeled on the "household of nature." Discusses examples of overlap including the Bauhaus design at the London Zoo and the utopian visions of H. G. Wells.

Anker, Peder. "The Economy of Nature in the Botany of Nehemiah Grew (1641–1712)." Archives of Natural History 31 (2 2004): 191–207. Examines the work and philosophy of Nehemiah Grew (1641–1712), the first curator of plants at The Royal Society, one of the chief supporters of the early-modern emergence of mathematical and mechanical reasoning as a means of understanding nature.

Anker, Peder. "The Politics of Ecology in South Africa on the Radical Left." Journal of the History of Biology 37 (2004): 303–331. Examines the entanglement of science and politics in South Africa's society and history, especially as seen through the works of ecologist and political activist Edward Roux (1903–1966).

Anker, Peder. "A Vindication of the Rights of Brutes." Philosophy & Geography 7 (August 2004): 259–264. Revisits Enlightenment ideas about human and animal rights to address the question of whether granting moral status to animals, plants, and landscapes de-legitimizes struggles for human rights. Focuses on a 1792 booklet of the same title which represents one of the first biocentric arguments for animal rights.

Ard, Patricia. "Garbage in the Garden State: A Trash Museum Confronts New Jersey's Image." Public Historian 27 (Summer 2005): 57–66. Discusses the Trash Museum which existed in Lyndhurst, New Jersey from 1989 to 1999, examining how that institution confronted head-on the state's history of unregulated garbage dumping while demonstrating its leadership in garbage disposal and land remediation.

Arno, Stephen. "Mimicking Nature's Fire: Guide to Restoring Sustainable Forests." Tree Farmer 24 (September/October 2005): 20–23. Summarizes author's 2005 book, Mimicking Nature's Fire: Restoring Fire-Prone Forests in the West, which explores the practice of "restoration forestry," or the process of restoring some semblance of historical forest structure and fire process. Profiles some restoration forestry projects in Montana.

Arnold, David. "Envisioning the Tropics: Joseph Hooker in India and the Himalayas, 1848–1850." In Tropical Visions in an Age of Empire, edited by Felix Driver and Luciana Martins. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005. 137–155 pp. Highlights botanist Joseph Hooker's contributions to scientific and public understanding of the tropics. Focus is on Hooker's travels to India, a region that is not in the tropics but possesses tropical vegetation.

Baigent, Elizabeth. "Mapping the Forests and Chases of England and Wales, c. 1530 to c. 1670." In Forests and Chases of England and Wales c.1500–c.1850: Towards a Survey & Analysis, edited by John Langton and Graham Jones. Oxford: St. John's College Research Centre, 2005. 21–28 pp. Explores mapping of crown lands in England and Wales, including royal forests, c. 1530–1670.

Barnett, Leroy. "Turnouts That Turn On." Michigan History 89 (January/February 2005): 46–49. History of roadside rest stops and parks in Michigan, where the nation's first was opened in 1919.. . .

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