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Academic & Professional Books  History & Other Humanities  Environmental History

Environment as a Weapon Geographies, Histories and Literature

By: Charles Travis(Author)
154 pages, 30 colour & 13 b/w illustrations
Publisher: Springer Nature
Environment as a Weapon
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  • Environment as a Weapon ISBN: 9783031508554 Hardback Mar 2024 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 1-2 weeks
    £180.00
    #266798
Price: £180.00
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About this book

Environment as a Weapon considers how the confluence of war and nature from the time of the Agricultural Revolution (10,000 BCE) to our present day has been represented in works of history, geography, and literature.

For example, in the Epic of Gilgamesh, the Torah, and Greco-Roman myths, warfare is a trope commensurate with environmental disasters, extreme climate, and plague. In the medieval age myths, the Tain and Beowulf environments become allies and enemies. The equestrian steppe land as the foundation of Genghis Khan's and his heirs' Pax Mongolica is chronicled in The Secret History of the Mongols and The Travels of Marco Polo. The West African Griot legend of Sundiata and the Little Ice Age wreck of the Spanish Armada in 1588 speak to oceanic and atmospheric dimensions of warfare. American Revolution political pamphlets, poetry, diaries and weather logs, reflect the severe weather and terrain deployed by George Washington's early campaigns in the war of independence. Napoleon's midwifing of Total War is captured in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, Leo Tolstoy's War and Peace, and Charles Minard's Carte figurative carto-graph of the disastrous 1812 French invasion of Russia. The U.S. Civil War and the organic-industrial assembles of its battles, arguably the first Anthropocene War, is parsed by the clarifying poetry of Emily Dickinson. Geopolitik and geo-hazards of flood and fire feature in the Global War works of Samuel Beckett, Kurt Vonnegut, and James Dickey. The literature of Vietnamese and American war combat veterans reveals how North Vietnam's Environmental Military Complex stalled the American Military Industrial Complex in the jungles, and R&R districts of southwestern Asia. Finally, the sci-fi of H.G. Wells' World Set Free and David Mitchell's Cloud-Atlas frame Oppenheimer's sub-atomic deployments at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, James Lovelock's 'Gaia', and U.S. military discourses situating global warming as a national security threat to America.

Indeed, Environment as a Weapon ironically resonates with U.N. Secretary General António Guterres proclamation that "seventy-five years ago, the world emerged from a series of cataclysmic events: two successive world wars, genocide, a devastating influenza pandemic [...] Our founders gathered in San Francisco promising to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war". Thus, a holistic approach to studying and mitigating the human and environmental impacts of warfare, must integrate methods from the arts, humanities and sciences. This involves understanding how the historical geographies of the Earth's planetary systems have been perceived, deployed and emerged as agents of warfare, with the lithosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere, biosphere and atmosphere transformed as arsenals against anthropogenic global warming. Environment as a Weapon will be of interest to geographers, historians, and scholars in environmental studies, climate change, literature and military studies, as well as the broader environmental humanities.

Contents

Chapter 1. Prologue: Environment and War
Chapter 2. Ancient Warfare, 1500 BCE-128 CE
Chapter 3. Medieval Age Perceptions of War and Environment, 975-1493 CE
Chapter 4. Seachange: Early Modern Oceanic Wars, 1588-1762
Chapter 5. Winter Revolutions, 1775-1777
Chapter 6. The Decay of Nature and Birth of Total War, 1798-1812
Chapter 7. Industrial War of Organic Beings, The American Caesura 1860-1865
Chapter 8. Environmental Strategies and the Military-Ecological Complex, 1914-1975
Chapter 9. Epilogue: Tickling the Dragon's Tail

Customer Reviews

By: Charles Travis(Author)
154 pages, 30 colour & 13 b/w illustrations
Publisher: Springer Nature
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