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ix FoRewoRd Environmental History Comes of Age William Cronon Once in a great while, perhaps every decade or two for a given field, a book comes along that changes the way one thinks about an entire subject. Sometimes this happens when a writer of unusual creativity revisits a familiar topic and somehow manages to find in it insights so fresh that it’s hard to believe no one noticed them before. Sometimes it happens when a scholar of unusual range wanders across a vast historiography and ties it together in an act of synthesis that discovers unexpected connections among disparate elements that few imagined might be brought together in such a surprising way. And sometimes it happens when an intellectual of unusual generosity takes the questions and findings of a specialized subfield and so compellingly demonstrates their relevance to other fields and disciplines that the subfield suddenly feels far more mainstream than one thought. It is rare enough for a single book to succeed at one of these tasks; it is rarer still for one book to accomplish them all. And yet that is precisely what Mark Fiege’s The Republic of Nature: An Environmental History of the United States does. It is surely among the most important works of environmental history published since the field was founded four or more decades ago. No book before it has so compellingly demonstrated the value of applying environmental perspectives to historical events that at first glance may seem to have little to do with “nature” or “the environment.” No one who cares about the American past can afford to ignore what Fiege has to say. Having declared my enthusiasm so unabashedly, I should hasten to make sure that I don’t misrepresent the volume you hold in your hands. Despite its x FoRewoRd subtitle, this is not a comprehensive narrative synthesis of American environmental history. Squeezing such a vast subject between the covers of a single book is such a daunting task that few scholars have even attempted it. (The best is Ted Steinberg’s Down to Earth: Nature’s Role in American History, first published in 2002, which can now be supplemented with the superb historiographical essays gathered in Douglas Sackman’s A Companion to American Environmental History, published in 2010.) Mark Fiege chose for himself quite a different task when he embarked on this project more than a decade ago. Fearing that an encyclopedic account might fall victim to the familiar textbook problem of too much obligatory information trading depth for breadth and thereby undermining storytelling and analysis alike, he chose instead to concentrate on a few carefully chosen but far-flung episodes. Rather than try to synthesize everything that he and his colleagues had learned over the past half century about American environmental history, his goal would be to illustrate by example the kinds of questions and interpretive insights that have become central to the field. Fiege’s real stroke of genius lay in the way he selected episodes to demonstrate the value of an environmental historical perspective for scholars, students, and other readers unfamiliar with the field. As a committed undergraduate teacher, he wanted to write a book that could be used in U.S. history survey courses, where he knew full well that most high school and college teachers must necessarily rely on a standard textbook to guide their students through the vast terrain of the American past. A parallel environmental history textbook with a similar table of contents would have little chance of being adopted in such classrooms, and might even feel repetitious if it were. At the same time, Fiege wanted to write a book that would convey to nonacademic readers the ways environmental history can alter our sense of the past by encouraging us to see familiar events from radically different points of view. The solution he hit upon was to identify historical episodes that were so utterly familiar that every high school and college teacher was bound to include them in a U.S. history syllabus and every reader would recognize them. Then he applied a more daring and surprising criterion. He decided to seek out classic episodes in American history that are rarely if ever viewed in environmental terms so he could then reinterpret them through the lens of environmental history . Revisiting and rewriting the most familiar of histories to make them seem unexpectedly unfamiliar: this was the high bar Fiege set for himself. If my own description of the book suddenly...

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