A Field on Fire: The Future of Environmental History
Intro -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Introduction: A Good Set of Walking Shoes Mark D. Hersey -- I. Facing Limits -- 1. Subversive Subjects: Donald Worster and the Radical Origins of Environmental History / Ted Steinberg -- 2. Can Capitalism Ever Be Green? / Adam Rome -- 3. Seeing Like a God: Environmentalism in the Anthropocene / Frank Zelko -- 4. The Locked Door: Thomas Midgley Jr., Chlorofluorocarbons, and the Unintended Consequences of Technology / Kevin C. Armitage -- 5. Malibu, California: Edenic Illusions and Natural Disasters / Christof Mauch -- 6. Energizing Environmental History / Brian C. Black -- II. World Without Borders -- 7. The Force of Fiber: Reconnecting the Philippines with Latin America and the American West via Transnational Environmental History / Sterling Evans -- 8. Hunting and Wilderness in the Creation of National Identities / Mikko Saikku -- 9. Why We Need Comparative History: The Case of China and the United States / Shen Hou -- 10. The World in a Tin Can: Migrants in Environmental History / Marco Armiero -- 11. Down in the Sky: The Promise of Aerial Environmental History / Robert Wellman Campbell -- 12. Rivers of Dust: An Environmental Historian Appraises the American Legal System / Karl Boyd Brooks -- III. Doing Environmental History -- 13. Whole Earth without Borders: Earth Photographs, Space Data, and the Importance of Visual Culture within Environmental History / Neil M. Maher -- 14. Beyond Stories: Geospatial Influences on the Practice of Environmental History / Sara M. Gregg -- 15. Low-Hanging Fruit: Science and Environmental History / Edmund Russell -- 16. The Watershed of War: Environmental History and the "EBig Civil War" / Brian Allen Drake -- 17. War from the Ground Up: Integrating Military and Environmental Histories / Lisa M. Brady