Animals and Society in Brazil, from the Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries
Excerpt from Animals and Society in Brazil, from the Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries.
Excerpt from Animals and Society in Brazil, from the Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries.
Jon Coleman investigates the sometimes violent and always controversial relationship between the two species.
With the foundation of the mission village Botshabelo, new plant and animal species settle in this region, whose landscape is heavily altered.
Across eleven chapters, the contributors to this edited volume survey the histories of state forestry policy in Scandinavia, the Low Countries, Germany, Poland, and Great Britain from the early modern period to the present.
This essay discusses ways of thinking about botanic gardens that pay close attention to their particularity as designed spaces, dependent on technique, that nonetheless purport to present (and preserve) natural entities (plants).
In this episode from the New Books Network podcast, Bruce Clarke is interviewed on his recent book, Gaian Systems: Lynn Margulis, Neocybernetics, and the End of the Anthropocene.
The tragic story of the Paradise Parrot is haunted by both the spectre and the reality of extinction.
In this episode from the New Books Network podcast, Nancy Langston is interviewed on her book, Climate Ghosts: Migratory Species in the Anthropocene.
This article rethinks Chinese foodways and invasive species from a crab’s perspective.
In linking culture with nature, science with history, Man and Nature was the most influential text of its time next to Darwin’s On the Origin of Species.