Kearns, Gerard
(2004)
Environmental History.
In:
A companion to cultural geography.
Blackwell Publishing, pp. 194-208.
ISBN 0-631-23050-5
Abstract
There was a time when almost all Western geography could be termed environmental
history. In the late nineteenth century, physical geographers explained landscapes
by describing how they had evolved. Likewise, human geographers saw
society as shaped by the directing hands of the environment. By the 1960s this had
very much changed. Process studies shortened the temporal framework in geographical
explanation and cut the cord between nature and society. Now, physical
and human landscapes were seen as responding to short-term fluctuations around
a long-term steady state. Between the homeostatic systems of the geomorphologist
and the isotropic surfaces of the economic geographer, there seemed to be no congress.
For a number of reasons, environmental history now enjoys a renewed significance
within human geography. I want to explore four sets of reasons why this
is so. First, I will look at the continuing importance of an ecological tradition in
geography that was always more than mere environmental determinism. In the
second place, I will explore how geographical reasoning has continued to be of interest
in what we might term big-picture histories. Thirdly, I want to consider how
environmental history was treated within Marxist geography. Finally, I intend to
consider how the New Cultural Geography has treated the subject. I will conclude
by examining some studies that draw upon the best from these four approaches.
Item Type: |
Book Section
|
Keywords: |
Environmental history; Cultural geography; |
Academic Unit: |
Faculty of Social Sciences > Geography |
Item ID: |
8095 |
Depositing User: |
Gerry Kearns
|
Date Deposited: |
29 Mar 2017 15:41 |
Publisher: |
Blackwell Publishing |
Refereed: |
Yes |
URI: |
|
Use Licence: |
This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available
here |
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