Historians and Natureconsiders five cutting-edge questions facing environmental historians today. How can we historicise nature? Is nature a historical actor? How have human beings interacted with nature and what patterns have emerged? How do we understand the ecology of urban spaces? What is the history of environmental diplomacy? Focusing on the United States and Germany, the book takes a comparative approach in examining environmental history. The authors draw on a range of interdisciplinary perspectives, including history, cultural studies, human geography, biology and ecology. Case studies include Native Americans and their relationship to the environment, the California Gold Rush and the Coal Fields of the Ruhr Basin in the nineteenth century, the controversial building of dikes in seventeenth-century Germany, cleaning up modern cities, and the Greenpeace movement and the development of international environmental activism in the 1970s.Ursula Lehmkuhl is Professor of North American History, John F. Kennedy Institute, Free University of Berlin Hermann Wellenreuther is Chair of Early Modern History, Georg-August-University, G?ttingen
Notes on Contributors Introduction, Ursula Lehmkuhl Public Address 1. Money versus public affairs Reflections on a better balance between public and private goods, Ernst Ulrich von Weizscker, MP PART 1: The Historicization of Nature 2.Historicizing Nature: Time and Space in German and American Environmental History, Ursula Lehmkuhl 3. Ecologics/ecosophy: the event of the city, Hanjo Berressem Comment: Christof Mauch , Mark Hberlein, Michael Williams part 2: Nature as Actor: Social and Economic Consequences of Environmental Catastrophes and Epidemics 4. Native Americans, History, and the Environment, Christian F. Feest 5. Nature in Conflict. Disputes surrounding the dike in 17th century Northern Frisia as a window into an Early Modern coastal society, Marie Luisa Allemeyer Comment: Klaus-Georg Wey , Stanely W. Trible, Franlc$