Nature Contested
Environmental History in Scotland and Northern England since 1600
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book is about how we have treated nature in some of the most valued landscapes in Europe. Combining social and cultural history with ecology and geography, T.C. Smout has written an environmental history that is both profound and accessible. The Highlands and Lowlands of Scotland, the Lake District and the northern moors and plains of England form a natural region. The crags, moorland, woods and wetlands have been both treasured for their beauty and biodiversity and reviled as unproductive deserts to be improved and reclaimed. The fields have been made more fertile for production and the waters tapped for industrial use, but at a certain cost. The contest between two views of nature - conservation versus development; use versus delight - is at the centre of the book. The author begins by taking a hard look at our encounters with the natural world. He shows how the Scots and the northern English never shared the southerner's view of their environment as intimidating, and describes how conflict between using and enjoying the land gradually arose and gave birth to modern conservation ideas. He reveals how the history of the woods - especially the 'Great Wood of Caledon' - is quite different from popular myth, and examines the history and fate of the soil and the fields; of the rivers, lakes and lochs; of the hills and mountains; and of the modern quarrel over the countryside. 'By the end,' the author writes, 'I hope to have presented on my theatre a dramatic tale that tells us a fair amount not only of northern Britain, but something about the globe and the European west as a whole over the last four hundred years.'
The text is wonderfully readable ! stimulating ! makes compelling material for both reading and reflection. T C Smout has written the first comprehensive but accessible history of the politics of the environment in Scotland. What is most striking about this is wonderfully written book is the passion lurking just beneath the well-argued surface!this masterly but accessible volume serves to highlight the potential of environmental history within a European context, in all its complexity, beauty and tragedy. Christopher Smout considerably advances our understanding of the North and West!This informative, stimulating and lucidly-written volume includes some fifty illustrations, all of them eye-catching and apposite!Such a case study of contested Nature, within the physical and cultural context of Northern Britain, could not be more timely nor of more enduring significance. Concise but comprehensive, scientifically informed, and wonderfully written, this is an outstanding history of Britain's changing natural world. -- Donald Worster, Hall Professor of History, University of Kansas The text is wonderfully readable ! stimulating ! makes compelling material for both reading and reflection. T C Smout has written the first comprehensive but accessible history of the politics of the environment in Scotland. What is most striking about this is wonderfully written book is the passion lurking just beneath the well-argued surface!this masterly but accessible volume serves to highlight the potential of environmental history within a European context, in all its complexity, beauty and tragedy. Christopher Smout considerably advances our understanding of the North and West!This informative, stimulating and lucidly-written volume includes some fifty illustrations, all of them eye-catching and apposite!Such a case study of contested Nature, within the physical and cultural context of Northern Britain, could not be more timely nor of more enduring significance. Concise but comprehensive, scientifically informed, and wonderfully written, this is an outstanding history of Britain's changing natural world.
ISBN: 9780748614110
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 416g
210 pages