
Since The Appearance Of Homo Sapiens On The Planet Hundreds Of Thousands Of Years Ago, Human Beings Have Sought To Exploit Their Environments, Extracting As Many Resources As Their Technological Ingenuity Has Allowed. As Technologies Have Advanced In Recent Centuries, That Impulse Has Remained Largely Unchecked, Exponentially Accelerating The Human Impact On The Environment. Humans Versus Nature Tells A History Of The Global Environment From The Stone Age To The Present, Emphasizing The Adversarial Relationship Between The Human And Natural Worlds. Nature Is Cast As An Active Protagonist, Rather Than A Mere Backdrop Or Victim Of Human Malfeasance. Daniel R. Headrick Shows How Environmental Changes--epidemics, Climate Shocks, And Volcanic Eruptions--have Molded Human Societies And Cultures, Sometimes Overwhelming Them. At The Same Time, He Traces The History Of Anthropogenic Changes In The Environment--species Extinctions, Global Warming, Deforestation, And Resource Depletion--back To The Age Of Hunters And Gatherers And The First Farmers And Herders. He Shows How Human Interventions Such As Irrigation Systems, Over-fishing, And The Industrial Revolution Have In Turn Harmed The Very Societies That Initiated Them. Throughout, Headrick Examines How Human-driven Environmental Changes Are Interwoven With Larger Global Systems, Dramatically Reshaping The Complex Relationship Between People And The Natural World. In Doing So, He Roots The Current Environmental Crisis In The Deep Past.
This work investigates the long-term adversarial relationship between human civilization and the natural world, questioning how technological advancement has historically shaped this interaction. Daniel R. Headrick, a historian specializing in technology and environmental history, utilizes a broad chronological framework to analyze the reciprocal impact of human activity on the environment and environmental phenomena on human societal development. He argues that the current environmental crisis is not a modern anomaly but the culmination of a trajectory established during the Stone Age.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant synthesis of environmental history that successfully positions modern ecological challenges within a deep historical context. Readers frequently note the accessibility of the prose despite the vast chronological scope covered by the author.
Page Count:
560
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190864737
ISBN-13:
9780190864736
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