Invaluable trees

Trees and tree products have long been central to human life and culture, taking on intensified significance during the long eighteenth century. As basic raw material they were vital economic resources, objects of international diplomatic and commercial exchange, and key features in local economies....

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Weitere Verfasser: Auricchio, L
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: Voltaire Foundation 2017
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author2 Auricchio, L
author_facet Auricchio, L
collection OXFORD
description Trees and tree products have long been central to human life and culture, taking on intensified significance during the long eighteenth century. As basic raw material they were vital economic resources, objects of international diplomatic and commercial exchange, and key features in local economies. In an age of ongoing deforestation, both individuals and public entities grappled with the complex issues of how and why trees mattered. <br/> In this interdisciplinary volume, contributors build on recent research in environmental history, literary and material culture, and postcolonial studies to develop new readings of the ways trees were valued in the eighteenth century. They trace changes in early modern theories of resource management and ecology across European and North American landscapes, and show how different and sometimes contradictory practices were caught up in shifting conceptions of nature, social identity, physical health and moral wellbeing. <br/> In its innovative and thought-provoking exploration of man’s relationship with trees, <em>Invaluable trees: cultures of nature, 1660 –1830</em> argues for new ways of understanding the long eighteenth century and its values, and helps re-frame the environmental challenges of our own time. <br/><br/> Laura Auricchio, Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook and Giulia Pacini, Introduction: invaluable trees<br/> I. Arboreal lives<br/> Hamish Graham, ‘Alone in the forest’? Trees, charcoal and charcoal burners in eighteenth-century France<br/> J. L. Caradonna, Conservationism <em>avant la lettre,</em>? Public essay competitions on forestry and deforestation in eighteenth-century France<br/> Paula Young Lee, Land, logs and liberty: the Revolutionary expansion of the Muséum d’histoire naturelle during the Terror<br/> Peter Mcphee, ‘Cette anarchie dévastatrice’: the <em>légende noire</em> of the French Revolution<br/> Paul Elliott, Erasmus Darwin’s trees<br/> Giulia Pacini, At home with their trees: arboreal beings in the eighteenth-century French imaginary<br/> II. Strategic trees<br/> Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook, The vocal stump: the politics of tree-felling in Swift’s ‘On cutting down the old thorn at Market Hill’<br/> Michael Guenther, Tapping nature’s bounty: science and sugar maples in the age of improvement<br/> Meredith Martin, Bourbon renewal at Rambouillet<br/> Susan Taylor-Leduc, Assessing the value of fruit trees in the marquis de Fontanes’s poem <em>Le Verger</em><br/> Elizabeth Hyde, Arboreal negotiations, or William Livingston’s American perspective on the cultural politics of trees in the Atlantic world<br/> Lisa Ford, The ‘naturalisation’ of François André Michaux’s <em>North American sylva</em>: patriotism in early American natural history<br/> III. Arboreal enlightenments<br/> Tom Williamson, The management of trees and woods in eighteenth-century England<br/> Steven King, The healing tree<br/> Nicolle Jordan, ‘I writ these lines on the body of the tree’: Jane Barker’s arboreal poetics<br/> Waltraud Maierhofer, Goethe and forestry<br/> Paula R. Backscheider, Disputed value: women and the trees they loved<br/> Aaron S. Allen, ‘Fatto di Fiemme’: Stradivari’s violins and the musical trees of the Paneveggio<br/> Summaries<br/> Bibliography<br/> Index<br/><br/>
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spelling oxford-uuid:7cced9ff-8a37-4075-a9e8-5b1be40f28262022-03-26T20:59:23ZInvaluable treesBookhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2f33uuid:7cced9ff-8a37-4075-a9e8-5b1be40f2826EnglishVoltaire FoundationVoltaire Foundation2017Auricchio, LCook, EPacini, GTrees and tree products have long been central to human life and culture, taking on intensified significance during the long eighteenth century. As basic raw material they were vital economic resources, objects of international diplomatic and commercial exchange, and key features in local economies. In an age of ongoing deforestation, both individuals and public entities grappled with the complex issues of how and why trees mattered. <br/> In this interdisciplinary volume, contributors build on recent research in environmental history, literary and material culture, and postcolonial studies to develop new readings of the ways trees were valued in the eighteenth century. They trace changes in early modern theories of resource management and ecology across European and North American landscapes, and show how different and sometimes contradictory practices were caught up in shifting conceptions of nature, social identity, physical health and moral wellbeing. <br/> In its innovative and thought-provoking exploration of man’s relationship with trees, <em>Invaluable trees: cultures of nature, 1660 –1830</em> argues for new ways of understanding the long eighteenth century and its values, and helps re-frame the environmental challenges of our own time. <br/><br/> Laura Auricchio, Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook and Giulia Pacini, Introduction: invaluable trees<br/> I. Arboreal lives<br/> Hamish Graham, ‘Alone in the forest’? Trees, charcoal and charcoal burners in eighteenth-century France<br/> J. L. Caradonna, Conservationism <em>avant la lettre,</em>? Public essay competitions on forestry and deforestation in eighteenth-century France<br/> Paula Young Lee, Land, logs and liberty: the Revolutionary expansion of the Muséum d’histoire naturelle during the Terror<br/> Peter Mcphee, ‘Cette anarchie dévastatrice’: the <em>légende noire</em> of the French Revolution<br/> Paul Elliott, Erasmus Darwin’s trees<br/> Giulia Pacini, At home with their trees: arboreal beings in the eighteenth-century French imaginary<br/> II. Strategic trees<br/> Elizabeth Heckendorn Cook, The vocal stump: the politics of tree-felling in Swift’s ‘On cutting down the old thorn at Market Hill’<br/> Michael Guenther, Tapping nature’s bounty: science and sugar maples in the age of improvement<br/> Meredith Martin, Bourbon renewal at Rambouillet<br/> Susan Taylor-Leduc, Assessing the value of fruit trees in the marquis de Fontanes’s poem <em>Le Verger</em><br/> Elizabeth Hyde, Arboreal negotiations, or William Livingston’s American perspective on the cultural politics of trees in the Atlantic world<br/> Lisa Ford, The ‘naturalisation’ of François André Michaux’s <em>North American sylva</em>: patriotism in early American natural history<br/> III. Arboreal enlightenments<br/> Tom Williamson, The management of trees and woods in eighteenth-century England<br/> Steven King, The healing tree<br/> Nicolle Jordan, ‘I writ these lines on the body of the tree’: Jane Barker’s arboreal poetics<br/> Waltraud Maierhofer, Goethe and forestry<br/> Paula R. Backscheider, Disputed value: women and the trees they loved<br/> Aaron S. Allen, ‘Fatto di Fiemme’: Stradivari’s violins and the musical trees of the Paneveggio<br/> Summaries<br/> Bibliography<br/> Index<br/><br/>
spellingShingle Invaluable trees
title Invaluable trees
title_full Invaluable trees
title_fullStr Invaluable trees
title_full_unstemmed Invaluable trees
title_short Invaluable trees
title_sort invaluable trees