Sensing Changes
Technologies, Environments, and the Everyday, 1953-2003
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of British Columbia Press
Published:15th Dec '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A social and sensory history of life with megaprojects that reveals how humans make sense of their world when they no longer recognize the environment around them.
These narratives about state-driven megaprojects and technological and regulatory changes reveal how humans make sense of their world in the face of rapid environmental change.
Our bodies are archives of sensory knowledge that shape how we understand the world. But if global environmental changes continue at their present unsettling pace, how will we make sense of time and place when the air, land, and water around us are no longer familiar?
Joy Parr, one of Canada’s premier historians, tackles this question by exploring situations in the recent past when state-driven megaprojects such as chemical plants, dams, nuclear reactors, transportation corridors, and new regulatory regimes forced people to cope with radical transformations in their work and home environments. In each case, the familiar was transformed so thoroughly that residents no longer recognized where they lived or, by implication, who they were.
Sensing Changes and its associated website, http://megaprojects.uwo.ca, make a key contribution to environmental history and the emerging field of sensory history. This study offers a timely, prescient perspective on how humans make sense of the world in the face of rapid environmental change.
The New Media component of Sensing Changes is a wonderful illustration of how we can and should engage our students in multi-sensory ways and how we, as historians, must move beyond privileging the written word.
-- Lisa Rumiel, McMaster University * Left History, 15.1 *Historian and geographer Joy Parr has written an extraordinary book…Sensing Changes will make important contributions to the field of sensory studies and that other readers, approaching their own topics in diverse locations and from various disciplinary backgrounds, will, like this reviewer, find edification and inspiration in the pages of this remarkable book.
-- Deborah Davis Jackson, Earlham College * Senses and Society, Vol 6, Issue- Winner of Canada Prize in the Social Sciences, Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences 2011 (Canada)
- Winner of Sidney Edelstein Prize, Society for the History of Technology 2011 (United States)
- Short-listed for Sir John A. Macdonald Book Prize, Canadian Historical Association 2011 (Canada)
- Short-listed for The François-Xavier Garneau Medal, Canadian Historical Association 2015 (Canada)
ISBN: 9780774817233
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 560g
304 pages
2nd Edition