Wild Things: Nature and the Social Imagination

Karen Middleton, Simon Pooley, and William Beinart
The White Horse Press
2013-07-01

"Wild Things: Nature and the Social Imagination" assembles eleven substantive and original essays on the cultural and social dimensions of environmental history. They address a global cornucopia of social and ecological systems, from Africa to Europe, North America and the Caribbean, and their temporal range extends from the 1830s into the twenty-first century.
The imaginative (and actual) construction of landscapes and the appropriation of Nature – through image-fashioning, curating museum and zoo collections, making ‘friends’, ‘enemies’ and mythical symbols from animals – are recurring subjects. Among the volume’s thought-provoking essays are a group enmeshing nature and the visual culture of photography and film. Canonical environmental history themes, from colonialism to conservation, are re-inflected by discourses including gender studies, Romanticism, politics and technology.
The loci of the studies included here represent both the microcosmic – underwater laboratory, zoo, film studio; and broad canvases – the German forest, the Rocky Mountains, the islands of Haiti and Madagascar. Their casts too are richly varied – from Britain’s otters and Africa’s Nile crocodiles to Hollywood film-makers and South African cattle. The volume represents an excitingly diverse collection of studies of how humans, in imagination and deed, act on and are acted on by ‘wild things’.

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Keywords

  • Social impact of environmental issues
  • Society & culture: general
  • Social & cultural history
  • Cultural studies
  • Animals & society
  • The environment
  • Wildlife: general interest
  • General and world history
  • Conservation of the environment
  • Society and culture: general
  • environmental history
  • multispecies histories
  • wilderness

Wild Things: Nature and the Social Imagination

Karen Middleton, Simon Pooley, and William Beinart

The White Horse Press

2013-07-01

"Wild Things: Nature and the Social Imagination" assembles eleven substantive and original essays on the cultural and social dimensions of environmental history. They address a global cornucopia of social and ecological systems, from Africa to Europe, North America and the Caribbean, and their temporal range extends from the 1830s into the twenty-first century.
The imaginative (and actual) construction of landscapes and the appropriation of Nature – through image-fashioning, curating museum and zoo collections, making ‘friends’, ‘enemies’ and mythical symbols from animals – are recurring subjects. Among the volume’s thought-provoking essays are a group enmeshing nature and the visual culture of photography and film. Canonical environmental history themes, from colonialism to conservation, are re-inflected by discourses including gender studies, Romanticism, politics and technology.
The loci of the studies included here represent both the microcosmic – underwater laboratory, zoo, film studio; and broad canvases – the German forest, the Rocky Mountains, the islands of Haiti and Madagascar. Their casts too are richly varied – from Britain’s otters and Africa’s Nile crocodiles to Hollywood film-makers and South African cattle. The volume represents an excitingly diverse collection of studies of how humans, in imagination and deed, act on and are acted on by ‘wild things’.

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • Social impact of environmental issues
  • Society & culture: general
  • Social & cultural history
  • Cultural studies
  • Animals & society
  • The environment
  • Wildlife: general interest
  • General and world history
  • Conservation of the environment
  • Society and culture: general
  • environmental history
  • multispecies histories
  • wilderness