Review:
"The essays in A Field on Fire examine new trends in environmental history and will interest environmental historians, geographers, and historians of science and technology."
--Lisa Mighetto, author of Wild Animals and American Environmental Ethics and executive director of the American Society for Environmental History
"These essays in honor of pioneer environmental historian Donald Worster are eye-openers. The authors call for transcending the perimeters of the discipline by drawing on new technologies and old concepts, and by using both global and local scales of inquiry, all with a sense of manifest urgency. Three sections deal with Worster's main concerns: nature's limits, the need to overcome artificial boundaries, and a "green" historical method. New explorations of the effects of emigration, the possibilities GIS offers historians, and non-Western approaches are explored. One essay takes a micro-look at the environmental degradation of Malibu; another calls for a macro-look at our planet from space. The useful introduction and afterword tie the text together. Perspectives offered by ecofeminism and ecoanarchism are not considered, however. All 17 essays share common assumptions: historians have neglected the intricacies of the nature/human nexus; our civilization is now bumping up against nature's limits; our activities can have unintended consequences; the primary culprit in the ecological crisis is capitalism; rigid academic boundaries have stifled useful analysis; both science and the humanities require a new axiology; and above all, we don't have much time left to get it right. Recommended."
--CHOICE
"A Field on Fire is an engaging volume that includes a very special afterword by one of Worster's oldest friends, the eminent intellectual historian Daniel Rodgers, who has known Worster for close to fifty years."
--Midwest Book Review
"Like a good prairie fire, the essays in this uniformly excellent collection seek to rejuvenate the field of environmental history, allowing its radical origins to regreen and sprout anew. A Field on Fire is a fitting tribute to Donald Worster's remarkable career as an historical innovator who insisted that our ethical responsibilities extended well beyond the human community."
--Paul S. Sutter, University of Colorado Boulder
"Every so often, practitioners unfold their maps to access the whereabouts and forward movement of their field of study. The contributors to this outstanding collection point to smart new directions for environmental history. Doing so, while also writing with verve and insight, they pay tribute to the field's most distinguished and agile pathfinder, Donald Worster."
--Jack Davis, author of Gulf: The Making of an American Sea, winner of the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for History
"A fun, thought-provoking read penned by some of the most talented environmental historians in the field."
--Bartow J. Elmore, author of Citizen Coke: The Making of Coca-Cola Capitalism
About the Author:
Mark D. Hersey is associate professor of history at Mississippi State University where he directs the Center for the History of Agriculture, Science, and the Environment of the South. He is author of My Work Is That of Conservation: An Environmental Biography of George Washington Carver. Ted Steinberg is Adeline Barry Davee Distinguished Professor of History and professor of law at Case Western Reserve University. He is the author of Gotham Unbound: The Ecological History of Greater New York; American Green: The Obsessive Quest for a Perfect Lawn; Down to Earth: Nature's Role in American History; Acts of God: The Unnatural History of Natural Disaster in America; and Nature Incorporated; Industrialization and the Waters of New England.
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