"New Zealand Landscape and Literature, 1890–1925"
New Zealand’s literature (1890–1925) offers a wealth of information for the environmental historian that is unparalleled by most other countries.
New Zealand’s literature (1890–1925) offers a wealth of information for the environmental historian that is unparalleled by most other countries.
This article addresses the direct impacts of war on the physical landscape and why the magnitude of disturbance has increased significantly over the past century.
Martin Schmid, Carson Fellow from March to August 2011, speaks about his research project, “An Environmental History of the Danube.”
Explores the conceptualization of environments as landscape, philosophically and historically.
This book considers the variegated world of mountains and their development during the last five hundred years.
Bao Maohong, Carson Fellow from July to December 2011, talks about his work on landscape transformation in China.
A small town in northwestern Montana is beset by the worst case of community-wide exposure to a toxic substance in US history.
A history of constructed and designed landscapes in the United States’ national parks.
This film shows how farming, state, and business and finance interrelate, such that various forms of malnutrition continue to pose a risk that is often life threatening, even in times of overproduction.
The arrival in 2010 of a major international public art exhibition in the heart of the Emscher valley marked a new chapter in the regeneration of an area, where infrastructure, environmental, and art history continue to become entangled in new and fascinating ways.