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Environmental History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 October 2008

Linda Merricks
Affiliation:
School of English and American Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.

Extract

A cursory examination of publishers’ catalogues reveals a number of titles like Environmental History, Green History and An Environmental History of Britain which suggest an upsurge of interest in what has come to be called ‘environmental history’. This weight of scholarship suggests that demands for the ‘greening of history’, or for more studies of the impact of human actions on the countryside, which have been made throughout the present decade, have been answered. It is worth noting the shift of title from ‘Green’ to ‘Environmental’. ‘Green’ is increasingly attached to the political movements and social groups concerned with environmental issues and even, in the case of the German Greens, to political parties whose concerns include ecology as only one of a number of interests. ‘Environmental’ has a much broader range, but, as the titles below demonstrate, this is by no means an absolute distinction. Closer consideration of many of these works reveals that although ‘History’ appears in many titles, the books are actually written by archaeologists, by sociologists, by political theorists, by Green activists and, most frequently, by geographers - all with ‘historical’ appended to their discipline. The Social Construction of the Past is a collection of essays from the Second World Archaeological Conference; Environmentalism proves to be ‘the view from Anthropology’ but contains at least one essay which appears to be a model of what environmental history could be. Historical Ecology: Cultural Knowledge and Changing Landscapes, rather confusingly, has chapters on historical transformations and a discussion of the ‘history’ in historical ecology. This is perhaps not surprising. History has always prided itself on interdisciplinarity and on its universal appeal. The usual justifications for undergraduate history begin from the premise that a knowledge of one's own history is necessary for any understanding of society, and that history has so many variations that there is bound to be some congenial corner for anyone interested in the past. What is still lacking, however, is British environmental history, written by historians.

Type
Review Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

1 The question of terminology is a confusing one. However, there does seem to be a shift in favour of ‘Environmental History’ which is the title used here.

2 See, for example, Chase, Malcolm, ‘Can History be Green? A Prognosis’, Rural History 3: 2, 10 1992, 243–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sheail, John, ‘Green History - An Evolving Agenda’, Rural History, 4: 2, 10 1993, 209–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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