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El. knyga: Living Past: Environmental Histories of Modern Latin America

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Though still a relatively young field, the study of Latin American environmental history is blossoming, as the contributions to this definitive volume demonstrate. Bringing together thirteen leading experts on the region, A Living Past synthesizes a wide range of scholarship to offer new perspectives on environmental change in Latin America and the Spanish Caribbean since the nineteenth century. Each chapter provides insightful, up-to-date syntheses of current scholarship on critical countries and ecosystems (including Brazil, Mexico, the Caribbean, the tropical Andes, and tropical forests) and such cross-cutting themes as agriculture, conservation, mining, ranching, science, and urbanization. Together, these studies provide valuable historical contexts for making sense of contemporary environmental challenges facing the region.

Recenzijos

Taken together, the 13 essays that compose this volume provide an excellent introduction to the current state of modern Latin Americas environmental history. The volume admirably achieves both major goals established by the editors: to provide a synthesis of recent works in the field and to expose some of the seams and unresolved tensions in the practice of Latin American and Caribbean environmental history. While the volume will be of significant utility to established scholars in the field, graduate students and those new to the terrain of modern Latin Americas environmental history are likely to be the greatest beneficiaries. Most of the chapters are also concise and cogent enough to be accessible to advanced undergraduates.  Hispanic American Historical Review





Together, these essays stand out for their rich analysis, synthetic quality, and wide-ranging geographies and temporalities. Most of the authors consistently draw comparisons, connections and disjunctures across the region and beyond. Only two take the nation-state as their unit of analysis, but rather than diminishing their value, the authors choices allow them to rewrite national histories through the lens of environmental politics and the territorialisation of nature as material fact and cultural construction. Environment and History





This collection will prove to be a valuable resource for many. Scholars in environmental humanities and science recognize the challenges in discussing these layered problems in the classroom. This book provides a model going forward in presenting the historical background of current crises. Meanwhile, undergraduate students will benefit from how each chapter situates the question at hand in social, cultural, economic, and political history. Graduate students will appreciate the thorough research outlined in the chapters and in the footnotes. Overall, A Living Past lives up to its name and frames the past as very much alive in the Latin American environment. H-Net Reviews





There is no book out there that matches the scope, detail, and comprehensiveness of A Living Past. Especially for an edited collection of this kind, the consistency and quality of the scholarship are remarkable. Shawn Miller, Brigham Young University





With a refreshing variety of approaches, these essays represent the best of an emerging international network of scholars dedicated to Latin America. Together, they contain not just histories of decline, but a rich diversity of narratives. Joachim Radkau, University of Bielefeld

List of Illustrations, Tables, and Figures
vii
List of Maps
ix
Preface x
Introduction. Finding the "Latin American" in Latin American Environmental History 1(22)
John Soluri
Claudia Leal
Jose Augusto Padua
Chapter 1 Mexico's Ecological Revolutions
23(22)
Chris Boyer
Martha Micheline Carino Olvera
Chapter 2 The Greater Caribbean and the Transformation of Tropicality
45(22)
Reinaldo Funes Monzote
Chapter 3 Indigenous Imprints and Remnants in the Tropical Andes
67(24)
Nicolas Cuvi
Chapter 4 The Dilemma of the "Splendid Cradle": Nature and Territory in the Construction of Brazil
91(24)
Jose Augusto Padua
Chapter 5 From Threatening to Threatened Jungles
115(23)
Claudia Leal
Chapter 6 The Ivy and the Wall: Environmental Narratives from an Urban Continent
138(25)
Lise Sedrez
Regina Horta Duarte
Chapter 7 Home Cooking: Campesinos, Cuisine, and Agrodiversity
163(20)
John Soluri
Chapter 8 Hoofprints: Cattle Ranching and Landscape Transformation
183(22)
Shawn Van Ausdal
Robert W. Wilcox
Chapter 9 Extraction Stories: Workers, Nature, and Communities in the Mining and Oil Industries
205(21)
Myrna I. Santiago
Chapter 10 Prodigality and Sustainability: The Environmental Sciences and the Quest for Development
226(20)
Stuart McCook
Chapter 11 A Panorama of Parks: Deep Nature, Depopulation, and the Cadence of Conserving Nature
246(20)
Emily Wakild
Epilogue. Latin American Environmental History in Global Perspective 266(11)
J. R. McNeill
Selected Bibliography 277(11)
Index 288
John Soluri is Director of Global Studies at Carnegie Mellon University, where he teaches courses on food, energy, environment, and commodities in Latin America. He is the author of Banana Cultures: Agriculture, Environmental Change, and Consumption in Honduras and the United States (2006).