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Oral History and the Environment: Global Perspectives on Climate, Connection, and Catastrophe [Mīkstie vāki]

(Director, Institute for Oral History, Baylor University), (Oral historian and Senior Curator, Historic New Orleans Collection)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, height x width x depth: 156x237x22 mm, weight: 413 g, 16 B/W
  • Sērija : OXFORD ORAL HISTORY SERIES
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Mar-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190684976
  • ISBN-13: 9780190684976
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  • Cena: 34,54 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, height x width x depth: 156x237x22 mm, weight: 413 g, 16 B/W
  • Sērija : OXFORD ORAL HISTORY SERIES
  • Izdošanas datums: 13-Mar-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 0190684976
  • ISBN-13: 9780190684976
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
As uncontrolled development forces crises in the natural world, deeply ingrained human connections with the earth are changing. Oral history's proven ability to explore issues of race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexuality make it a uniquely effective methodology for bringing in new perspectives to our understanding of environments.

This book brings together interviews with a global range of activists, farmers, water system managers, victims of catastrophe, tribal trustees, wilderness rangers, reindeer herders, and foresters, among others whose life experience gives them special insights into human-environmental interaction and adaption. Commentary by oral historians examines how these stories can be used to better understand our relationship with the natural world. Oral History and the Environment takes what could seem broad and impersonal forces such as climate change and environmentalismDLand crystalizes their meaning through personal stories. It overturns narrow historical frameworks bounded artificially by national borders and instead portrays the issues facing our common ecosystems.

Oral History and the Environment: Global Perspectives on Climate, Connection, and Catastrophe brings together interviews with a global range of environmental activists, farmers, water system managers, victims of environmental catastrophe, tribal trustees, wilderness rangers, reindeer herders, and foresters, whose life experience gives them special insights into human-environmental interaction and adaption. Commentary by oral historians examines how these stories can be used to better understand our relationship with the natural world.

Recenzijas

Sloan and Cave have assembled an admirably global set of oral histories ranging from taiga to tropics and from oil spills to afforestation projects. This book brings to life perspectives and voices that rarely appear in the written record and reveal an intimately human side of environmental history as experienced by everyday people. Environmental history and oral history make good partners and this book is a shining example of how to realize their combined potential. * J.R. McNeill, author of Something New Under the Sun and The Great Acceleration * This book gets at the shared activist roots of environmental and oral history and demonstrates the fruitfulness of their cross-pollination. The various perspectives and ways of knowing illustrate how oral history and environmental history have been able to broaden each other's frameworks at the disciplinary and methodological levels. * Mary A. Larson, former president, Oral History Association * Overall this structure gave the reading experience a very pleasing rhythm. * Toby Butler, Oral History Society *

Acknowledgments ix
Contributors xi
Introduction: Querying Environmental and Human Landscapes 1(12)
Stephen M. Sloan
1 Grim Humor and Hope: Australian Oral Histories of Drought
13(21)
Deb Anderson
2 A Pelican in Her Piety: Perspectives on Wildlife Rescue in Louisiana Following the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
34(19)
Mark Cave
3 Fragmentary Time: Memory and Politics in the Wake of the Torrey Canyon
53(19)
Timothy Cooper
Anna Green
4 The Ghosts of Bhopal: Oral History, Environmental Justice, and the Literature of Protest
72(16)
Suroopa Mukherjee
5 Floating Reed Islands: Gendered Stories of Resilience during Ecological Disaster in the Mara Region, Tanzania
88(25)
Jan Bender Shetler
6 Fighting through the Fallout: Maternal and Feminist Resistance and the Fukushima Nuclear Disaster
113(22)
Heidi Hutner
7 More than H20: Exploring the Biophysical and Social Dimensions of Water
135(22)
Javier Arce Nazario
8 Environmental Guardians: Learning from Maori Perspectives on Geothermal Fields
157(24)
Caren Fox
9 When Little Fish Encounter a Big Dam: Environmental Conflict on the Upper Yangtze
181(12)
Dai Qing
Kang Xue
10 The Free Play of Natural Forces: Wild Methods of Oral History in Documenting Wilderness
193(21)
Debbie Lee
11 Culture Keepers: Voices of Renewal in the Eurasian Taiga
214(25)
Tero Mustonen
12 Who Speaks for the Trees?: Forestry in the Scottish Highlands
239(22)
K. Jan Oosthoek
Epilogue: The Fall and Rise of Oral Testimony in Environmental History 261(20)
Christopher Sellers
References 281(14)
Index 295
Stephen M. Sloan is the Director of the Institute for Oral History and Associate Professor of History at Baylor University.

Mark Cave is Senior Historian with the Historic New Orleans Collection. Sloan and Cave are the editors of Listening on the Edge: Oral History in the Aftermath of Crisis, winner of the Oral History Association book prize.