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- Digital Price: $19.00 USD (All sales final)
- Resilience: A Journal of the Environmental Humanities
- University of Nebraska Press
- Article
- Questioning the Anthropocene and Its Silences: Socioenvironmental History and the Climate Crisis Volume 3, Winter/Spring/Fall 2015-2016, pp. 403-426
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $28.50 USD.
This issue contains 17 articles in total
- Introduction: Grassroots History: Global Environmental Histories from Below
- Global Environmental History: An Introductory Reader ed. by John R. McNeill and Alan Roe (review)
- Questioning the Anthropocene and Its Silences: Socioenvironmental History and the Climate Crisis
- The Ginger Option and Oppositional Agriculture in Postcolonial Sierra Leone
- Possums, Quandongs, and Kurrajongs: Wild Harvesting as a Strategy for Farming through Drought in Australia
- Nature in “The Jungle”: Ethnic Workers, Environmental Inequalities, and Subaltern Cultures of Nature in Chicago’s Packingtown
- Indigenous Landscapes in Northwestern New Spain: Environmental History through Contested Boundaries and Colonial Land Claims
- Workers of the World’s Oceans: A Bottom-Up Environmental History of the Pacific
- Placing Edomae: The Changing Environmental Relations of Tokyo’s Early Modern Fishery
- Environmentalism in the Interstices: California’s Salton Sea and the Borderlands of Nature and Culture
- Defiant: Documenting the Violation of the Natural World by Latin American Reporters
- Stewards of Their Island: Rastafari Women’s Activism for the Forests and Waters in Trinidad and Tobago—Social Movement Perspectives
- Planting and Its Discontents: Or How Nomads Produced Spaces of Resistance in China’s Erstwhile Xikang Province
- From a Colonial Hinterland to a Postcolonial National Economy: Jute and the Bengal Delta, 1850s to 1950s
- Fighting Fire with Fire: Mobile Pastoralists and French Discourse on Wildfires in Nineteenth-Century Algeria
- “The Revolt of the Commons”: Resilience and Conflicts in the Water Management of the Jianghan Plain in Late Imperial China
- An Intermittent Order Contrived on Sand: Managing Water Siltage, Locusts, and Cultivators on the Lower Yangzi in the Early 1800s
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