Textbook
Environmental Anthropology: A Historical ReaderISBN: 978-1-4051-1137-9
Paperback
502 pages
December 2007, ©2007, Wiley-Blackwell
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“This reader provides an excellent sampling of classic anthropological writings on human ecology and environments. A truly comprehensive survey of the field and a range of genuine classics … articles that deserve their wide reputation. In comparison with other readers on this general topic, the present one focuses on truly influential, widely cited works and is more balanced and comprehensive. Very highly recommended for courses in environmental or ecological anthropology, conservation biology, and human ecology. Summing Up: Essential. All levels/libraries.” (Choice, November 2008)
"Anthropology has a long and rich history of efforts to make sense of human societies in relation to their natural environments, and this edited collection, by Michael Dove and Carol Carpenter of Yale University, is an important contribution to that history. I strongly recommend the book to environmental scientists and conservation practitioners as a source of ideas about the human dimension of the things they care about." (Environment Conservation, 2008)
“This volume is the foundational volume on environmental anthropology I wish I had put under my belt a decade ago. Selected with scrupulous care and introduced with illuminating commentary, this collection is Indispensable both for its intellectual depth and breadth.”–James C. Scott, Yale University
“This reader is exactly what professors like me have long
dreamed of, but never had, in teaching environmental anthropology.
Dove and Carpenter, two of the field’s most distinguished
scholars, have assembled and integrated the perfect collection of
classic and recent essays on humans and the environment. They
successfully develop the key historic themes of the field which are
then fleshed out through a careful selection of theoretical debates
and ethnographic cases written by some of the best anthropological
minds of the past and present.”
–Robert E. Rhoades, University of Georgia
“Distinguished environmental anthropologists Michael Dove
and Carol Carpenter provide a great service for both professional
colleagues and students in this specialization through a wonderful
benchmark sampling of articles from its history with an emphasis on
its formative and mature development during the decades of the
1950s through the 1990s. The progression of different phases and
approaches in the history of environmental anthropology is
exceedingly well illustrated through the five thematic parts of
this anthology. The chapters are placed in context through an
extensive, informative, and insightful introduction. This anthology
goes a long way toward filling one of the previously empty niches
among the textbooks available for this specialization and nicely
complements rather than competes with them. It is also
indispensable as a reference work.”
–Leslie E. Sponsel, Director, Ecological Anthropology
Program, University of Hawaii