Perspectives

Header SVG: 
Header title: 
RCC Perspectives
Header text: 
The online journal publishes provocative, less formal pieces related to the Rachel Carson Center's environment and society research themes.
Theme CSS class: 
perspectives
Teaser content: 
Strata and Three Stories
Frontpage teaser title: 
RCC Perspectives
Frontpage teaser_text: 
The online journal publishes provocative, less formal pieces related to the Rachel Carson Center's environment and society research themes
Landing page node ID: 
7836

On Water: Perceptions, Politics, Perils

About this issue

On Water showcases the range of disciplines and methodological approaches that are brought together at the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society. In this volume, nine scholars affiliated with the RCC present their research in the fields of history, philosophy, literary studies, geography, and cultural studies.

Content

Europe after Fukushima: German Perspectives on the Future of Nuclear Power

About this issue

One year after the reactor meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station, this volume of RCC Perspectives takes stock of its impact and possible legacy in Europe as part of the Rachel Carson Center’s research focus on natural disasters and cultures of risk.

Content

Fields and Forests: Ethnographic Perspectives on Environmental Globalization

About this issue

Around the world, fields and forests are increasingly dominated by the market, mediated by science, and subjected to new modes of transnational environmental governance. This volume of RCC Perspectives presents ethnographic insights into the impacts of such environmental globalization.

Content

Realizing Utopia: Ecovillage Endeavors and Academic Approaches

About this issue

Ecovillages are arguably seen as “pioneers of change.” Yet, thus far, little light has been shed on their potential to effect change beyond their own borders. This issue of RCC Perspectives presents a much needed overview of research on ecovillages, looking at the history and philosophy of utopias and presenting case studies and ongoing research from across the globe.

Content

Environment, Culture, and the Brain: New Explorations in Neurohistory

About this issue

Neuroscience offers historians ideas, methods, and questions that can help us understand the past in new and deeper ways than the traditional methods of history alone provide. This issue of RCC Perspectives collects a number of contributions to the growing field of neurohistory.

Content

Rachel Carson's Silent Spring: Encounters and Legacies

About this issue

This issue of RCC Perspectives takes a sweeping look at encounters with and legacies of the book, examining the global impact of Silent Spring over its half century of existence and considering the ways in which Rachel Carson’s ecological worldview equips us to understand and confront current and future challenges to our planet.

Content

Mining in Central Europe: Perspectives from Environmental History

About this issue

This volume of RCC Perspectives offers an interdisciplinary look at mining and its environmental impacts in central Europe. The metals and minerals covered in the articles include copper and silver in Tirol, mercury in Slovenia, lead and zinc in Westphalia, lime in the Rhineland, and uranium in East and West Germany.

Content

Why Do We Value Diversity? Biocultural Diversity in a Global Context

About this issue

The concept of biocultural diversity was introduced by ethnobiologists to argue that the variation within ecological systems is inextricably linked to cultural and linguistic differences. In this volume of RCC Perspectives, scholars from a wide range of fields reflect on the definition, impact, and possible vulnerabilities of the concept.

Content

Energy Transitions in History: Global Cases of Continuity and Change

About this issue

Over the last two centuries, human beings have come to rely on ever-increasing quantities of energy to fuel their rising numbers and improving standards of living. In this volume of RCC Perspectives, scholars from around the world consider how our relationship to energy has changed, why it has changed, and how it may change in the years to come.

Content