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BookPrinted Material
Author Judd, Richard William.

Title Second nature : an environmental history of New England / Richard W. Judd.

Publication Info. Amherst : University of Massachusetts Press, [2014]

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  GF504.N45 J84 2014    Available  ---
Description xi, 327 pages ; 23 cm.
Series Environmental history of the Northeast
Environmental history of the Northeast.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Preface -- Introduction : People and the land in New England -- Part I. The New World transformed : New England to 1800. 1. New England's Natives ; 2. Contact, colonization, and war ; 3. The ecologies of frontier farming -- Part II. Reconstructing nature in the industrial age, 1800 to 1900. 4. Industrializing the margins ; 5. Farm and factory ; 6. A transcendental place -- Part III. Synthetic technologies, organic needs : conservation in New England, 1850 to 2000. 7. Science, conservation, and the commons ; 8. Conserving urban ecologies ; 9. Saving second nature.
Summary "Bounded by the St. Lawrence Valley to the north, Lake Champlain to the west, and the Gulf of Maine to the east, New England may be the most cohesive region in the United States, with a long and richly recorded history. In this book, Richard W. Judd explores the mix of ecological process and human activity that shaped that history over the past 12,000 years. He traces a succession of cultures through New England's changing postglacial environment down to the 1600s, when the arrival of Europeans interrupted this coevolution of nature and culture. A long period of tension and warfare, inflected by a variety of environmental problems, opened the way for frontier expansion. This in turn culminated in a unique landscape of forest, farm, and village that has become the embodiment of what Judd calls "second nature"-- culturally modified landscapes that have superseded a more pristine "first nature." In the early 1800s changes in farm production and industrial process transformed central New England, while burgeoning markets at the geographical margins brought rapid expansion in fishing and logging activities. Although industrialization and urbanization severed connections to the natural world, the dominant cultural expression of the age, Romanticism, provided new ways of appreciating nature in the White Mountains and Maine woods. Spurred by these Romantic images and by a long tradition of local resource management, New England gained an early start in rural and urban conservation. In the 1970s environmentalists, inspired by a widespread appreciation for regional second-nature landscapes, moved quickly from battling pollution and preserving wild lands to sheltering farms, villages, and woodlands from intrusive development. These campaigns, uniquely suited to the region's land-use history, ecology, and culture, were a fitting capstone to the environmental history of New England." -- Publisher's description.
Subject Human ecology -- New England -- History.
Human ecology.
New England.
History.
New England -- History.
Genre/Form History.
ISBN 1625340664 (paperback) (alkaline paper)
1625341016 (hardcover) (alkaline paper)
9781625340665 (paperback) (alkaline paper)
9781625341013 (hardcover) (alkaline paper)