Details

Telling Environmental Histories


Telling Environmental Histories

Intersections of Memory, Narrative and Environment
Palgrave Studies in World Environmental History

von: Katie Holmes, Heather Goodall

106,99 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 12.12.2017
ISBN/EAN: 9783319637723
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p>This collection explores the intersections of oral history and environmental history. Oral history offers environmental historians the opportunity to understand the ways people’s perceptions, experiences and beliefs about environments change over time. In turn, the insights of environmental history challenge oral historians to think more critically about the ways an active, more-than-human world shapes experiences and people. The integration of these approaches enables us to more fully and critically understand the ways cultural and individual memory and experience shapes human interactions with the more-than-human world, just as it enables us to identify the ways human memory, identity and experience is moulded by the landscapes and environments in which people live and labour. It includes contributions from Australia, India, the UK, Canada and the USA.</p>
<p>1. 1. Introduction:<b> </b>Telling Environmental Histories; <i>Katie Holmes and Heather Goodall.-&nbsp;<b>Part I: Rivers.- 2.&nbsp;</b></i>Memory, mobility & the more-than-human world: oral history and environmental history.;&nbsp;<i>Heather Goodall.-3. Talking Fish:&nbsp;</i>Oral History in the Environmental Histories of Murray-Darling Basin Rivers;&nbsp;<i>Jodi Frawley.- 4.</i>&nbsp; River of Many Voices: Oral and Environmental Histories of the Severn;&nbsp;<i>Marianna Dudley.- </i><b>Part II: De/Industrialisation.- 5.</b>&nbsp;Industrial Remains: Community Narratives of Mashapaug Pond in Providence, Rhode Island;&nbsp;<i>Anne Valk.- 6.&nbsp;</i>Building a safe space for unsafe memories: The Remember Bhopal Museum;&nbsp;<i>Rama Lakshmi & Shalini Sharma.- 7.&nbsp;</i>Stories of Life, Work and Nature before and after the Clean-Up of North-East England’s River Tyne, 1940-2015;&nbsp;<i>Leona Skelton.- 8.&nbsp;</i>The Deindustrialization of our Senses: Residual and Dominant Soundscapes in Montreal’s Point Saint-Charles District;&nbsp;<i>Piyusha Chatterjee & Steven High.-&nbsp;</i><b>Part III: Living with Environmental Change.- 9.</b> ‘Another weed will come along’: attitudes to weeds, land and community in the Victorian Mallee.; <i>Karen Twigg.- 10.&nbsp;</i>Famine and elephants: remembering place-making along Travancore's forest fringe.;&nbsp;<i>Meera Anna Oommen.-11. </i>Hearing the Legacy in the Forecast: Living with stories of Australian Climate;&nbsp;<i>Deb Anderson.- 12.&nbsp;</i>‘The devil you know’: environmental stories from the Victorian Mallee; <i>Katie Holmes.</i></p>
<div><p><b>Katie Holmes</b>&nbsp;is Director of the Centre for the Study of the Inland, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia. Her work in oral and environmental history seeks to understand the experience of Australian settlement, and integrates gender history, cultural history and literary studies. She is the author of&nbsp;<i>Spaces in Her Day: Australian women’s diaries of the 1920s and 1930s&nbsp;</i>(1995) and&nbsp;<i>Between the Leaves: Stories of Australian women, writing and gardens (2011)&nbsp;</i>and co-author of&nbsp;<i>Reading the Garden: the settlement of Australia</i>&nbsp;(2008), as well as numerous edited collections.</p><p> </p><b>Heather Goodall</b>&nbsp;is Professor Emerita of History at the University of Technology Sydney, Australia. She has published on Indigenous histories and environmental history in Australia and on colonialism and decolonisation in the 20<sup>th</sup>&nbsp;century in the eastern Indian Ocean. She has worked in collaborative projects with Indigenous people, published as&nbsp;<i>Invasion to Embassy: Land in Aboriginal Politics</i>, (1996), and the co-authored&nbsp;<i>Rivers and Resilience: Aboriginal People on Sydney’s Georges River</i>, (with Allison Cadzow, 2009);&nbsp;<i>Isabel Flick: the many lives of an extraordinary Aboriginal woman</i>, (with Isabel Flick, 2005); and&nbsp;<i>Making Change Happen</i>&nbsp;(with Kevin Cook, 2013).<p></p></div>
This collection explores the intersections of oral history and environmental history. Oral history offers environmental historians the opportunity to understand the ways people’s perceptions, experiences and beliefs about environments change over time. In turn, the insights of environmental history challenge oral historians to think more critically about the ways an active, more-than-human world shapes experiences and people. The integration of these approaches enables us to more fully and critically understand the ways cultural and individual memory and experience shapes human interactions with the more-than-human world, just as it enables us to identify the ways human memory, identity and experience is moulded by the landscapes and environments in which people live and labour. It includes contributions from Australia, India, the UK, Canada and the USA.<p></p>
Explores the intersections between two important and complementary fields, which have not, until now, been well integrated or theorised International in scope, recognising the extensive work arising from South Asian scholars and addressing themes of relevance (such as climate change, industrial contamination and de-industrialisation) across the global South as well as the global North Covers a wide range of subjects including memory, industrialisation, contamination, de-industrialisation, and environmental change

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