Nature and Power: A Global History of the Environment, by Joachim Radkau
As is perhaps suggested by its very title, Nature and Power, Joachim Radkau's important contribution to "a global history of the environment" takes as its primary axis of analysis the impact of the exercise of political authority by states on the natural world as constituted by plants...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Social science history 2013-10, Vol.37 (3), p.393-405 |
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description | As is perhaps suggested by its very title, Nature and Power, Joachim Radkau's important contribution to "a global history of the environment" takes as its primary axis of analysis the impact of the exercise of political authority by states on the natural world as constituted by plants, animals, soil, water, and air. The economy makes very few appearances as such. Indeed, the only index reference to things economic is a lone entry for Max Weber's Economy and Society (1922), and even there the economy is not the point of the citation. Yet economic history and environmental history share a great many common concerns, not least of which is what we might broadly call "human welfare." My comments will explore the possible connections between Radkau's reading of our global environmental past and the broad narratives developed by economic historians to tell their version of global history. Adapted from the source document. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1215/01455532-2209447 |
format | Article |
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The economy makes very few appearances as such. Indeed, the only index reference to things economic is a lone entry for Max Weber's Economy and Society (1922), and even there the economy is not the point of the citation. Yet economic history and environmental history share a great many common concerns, not least of which is what we might broadly call "human welfare." My comments will explore the possible connections between Radkau's reading of our global environmental past and the broad narratives developed by economic historians to tell their version of global history. 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The economy makes very few appearances as such. Indeed, the only index reference to things economic is a lone entry for Max Weber's Economy and Society (1922), and even there the economy is not the point of the citation. Yet economic history and environmental history share a great many common concerns, not least of which is what we might broadly call "human welfare." My comments will explore the possible connections between Radkau's reading of our global environmental past and the broad narratives developed by economic historians to tell their version of global history. 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The economy makes very few appearances as such. Indeed, the only index reference to things economic is a lone entry for Max Weber's Economy and Society (1922), and even there the economy is not the point of the citation. Yet economic history and environmental history share a great many common concerns, not least of which is what we might broadly call "human welfare." My comments will explore the possible connections between Radkau's reading of our global environmental past and the broad narratives developed by economic historians to tell their version of global history. Adapted from the source document.</abstract><doi>10.1215/01455532-2209447</doi><tpages>13</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Cambridge Journals - CAUL Collection |
subjects | Economic History Environment and politics Environmental history Environmental policy Historians Natural Environment Natural resources Political Power Power Radkau, Joachim Water Supply Weber, Max |
title | Nature and Power: A Global History of the Environment, by Joachim Radkau |
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