1st Edition

Governing the Environment in the Early Modern World Theory and Practice

Edited By Sara Miglietti, John Morgan Copyright 2017
    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    Throughout the early modern period, scientific debate and governmental action became increasingly preoccupied with the environment, generating discussion across Europe and the wider world as to how to improve land and climate for human benefit. This discourse eventually promoted the reconsideration of long-held beliefs about the role of climate in upholding the social order, driving economies and affecting public health.

    Governing the Environment in the Early Modern World explores the relationship between cultural perceptions of the environment and practical attempts at environmental regulation and change between 1500 and 1800. Taking a cultural and intellectual approach to early modern environmental governance, this edited collection combines an interpretative perspective with new insights into a period largely unfamiliar to environmental historians. Using a rich and multifaceted narrative, this book offers an understanding as to how efforts to enhance productive aspects of the environment were both led by and contributed to new conceptualisations of the role of ‘nature’ in human society.

    This book offers a cultural and intellectual approach to early modern environmental history and will be of special interest to environmental, cultural and intellectual historians, as well as anyone with an interest in the culture and politics of environmental governance.

     

     

    Foreword Mike Hulme  Introduction Sara Miglietti and John Morgan  1.Climate, travel and colonialism in the early modern world - Rebecca Earle  2. Jean Bodin and the idea of anachorism Richard Spavin  3. Marshes as microclimate: governing with the environment in early modern France Raphael Morera  4. Mastering north-east England's "River of Tine": efforts to manage a rvier's flow, functions and form 1529-c.1800 Leona Skelton  5. "Take plow and spade, build and plant and make the waste land fruitful": Gerrard Winstanley and the importance of labour Ashley Dodsworth   6. Winter and discontent in early modern England - William Cavert  7. “A considerable change of climate”: glacial retreat and British policy in the early-nineteenth-century Arctic - Anya Zilberstein  8."Vast factories of febrile poison": wetlands, drainage, and the fate of American climates, 1750-1850 - Anthony Carlson

    Biography

    Sara Miglietti is an Assistant Professor of French Studies at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USA.

    John Morgan is an environmental and social historian, and a Lecturer in Early Modern History at the University of Manchester, UK.

    Governing the Environment presents us with diverse and innovative scholarship on how early modern thinkers interpreted the complex relationships between people and their dynamic environments. Although focused on the past, this well-crafted volume provides fresh perspectives on current interrogations into what constitutes "nature" in light of the long history of politicized climate knowledge, the variable effects of human agency, and the challenges of environmental governance projects.
    Mary Floyd-Wilson, University of North Carolina

    With learning lightly worn, these insightful essays illuminate the multiple, and ever-evolving, understandings of climate and the environment circulating in Western Europe and North America in the early modern centuries. They convincingly show how deeply environmental ideas, and management practices, were embedded in prevailing political and social orders - then as now.
    John McNeill, Georgetown University