Nature: Western Attitudes Since Ancient Times

Author:   Peter Coates (University of Bristol)
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
ISBN:  

9780745616568


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   27 September 1998
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Nature: Western Attitudes Since Ancient Times


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Author:   Peter Coates (University of Bristol)
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:   Polity Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.340kg
ISBN:  

9780745616568


ISBN 10:   0745616569
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   27 September 1998
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

"Common green wisdom attributes modern treatment of the environment to all sorts of legacies from history, usually Western, Judaeo-Christian and capitalist. Peter Coates examines all the usual suspects, from the Ancient Greeks, to Renaissance man and the thinkers of the Enlightenment, and no less critically the usual eco-heroes, from St Francis and the Zen Buddhists to the American Indians. He places shifting ideas and attitudes in the full and proper context of their time, and rightly condemns the tendency to raid the past for handy quotations to legitimize the campaigns of the present. He shows us how landscapes in England and elsewhere are related to these ideas, particularly show pieces like National Trust properties and American National Parks, but they are often landscapes of dispossession as well as landscapes of conservation. He takes us into the immediate antecedents of modern environmentalism and shows us a green side to Engels and (alarmingly) to Himmler as well as to Wordsworth and William Morris. Always judicious, Peter Coates's book will prove the best possible guide to the history of environmental ideas. Anyone who seriously wants to find a way through the maze of the past and to judge how we have arrived at the present and who prizes scholarship above polemics, will need to read this book." Professor T. C. Smout, Institute for Environmental History, University of St Andrews "For some years it has struck me as intriguing that there is no good recent history of nature - though in a sense hardly surprising since one could not imagine a more daunting subject for a historian to tackle.... I am delighted to say that Peter Coates's text fills the bill particularly well: it is clear, cogent, comprehensive, and well organized.... This is a stunning book." Roy Porter, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine "I am very impressed with this book. It offers much more depth on most of the historical periods than any other book I've read.... and I couldn't stop reading it." Michael Barbour, University of California, "Peter Coates's Nature is an engaging book, written in a lucid and accessible style and enlivened by the author's wry humour." Professor Peter Burke, Emmanuel College, Cambridge "Coates' prose is lively and his critical perspactive engaging...students and general readers will find this an enjoyable and thought-provoking introduction to some of the key ideas and debates within environmental history." Andrea Gaynor, University of Western Australia 'Peter Coates's book is a welcome, updated introduction to environmental history. Presuming no prior knowledge of the field on the part of his readers, Coates confirms the discipline's "status as one of the most enthralling...pursuits within historical studies" (p.viii). Though faced with a monumental task of synthesis - even within a considerably narrowed scope - Coates succeeds admirably.' Journal of the History of the Behavioural Sciences


Common green wisdom attributes modern treatment of the environment to all sorts of legacies from history, usually Western, Judaeo--Christian and capitalist. Peter Coates examines all the usual suspects, from the Ancient Greeks, to Renaissance man and the thinkers of the Enlightenment, and no less critically the usual eco--heroes, from St Francis and the Zen Buddhists to the American Indians. He places shifting ideas and attitudes in the full and proper context of their time, and rightly condemns the tendency to raid the past for handy quotations to legitimize the campaigns of the present. He shows us how landscapes in England and elsewhere are related to these ideas, particularly show pieces like National Trust properties and American National Parks, but they are often landscapes of dispossession as well as landscapes of conservation. He takes us into the immediate antecedents of modern environmentalism and shows us a green side to Engels and (alarmingly) to Himmler as well as to Wordsworth and William Morris. Always judicious, Peter Coatesa s book will prove the best possible guide to the history of environmental ideas. Anyone who seriously wants to find a way through the maze of the past and to judge how we have arrived at the present and who prizes scholarship above polemics, will need to read this book. Professor T. C. Smout, Institute for Environmental History, University of St Andrews For some years it has struck me as intriguing that there is no good recent history of nature -- though in a sense hardly surprising since one could not imagine a more daunting subject for a historian to tackle... I am delighted to say that Peter Coatesa s text fills the bill particularly well: it is clear, cogent, comprehensive, and well organized... This is a stunning book. Roy Porter, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine I am very impressed with this book. It offers much more depth on most of the historical periods than any other book Ia ve read... and I couldna t stop reading it. Michael Barbour, University of California, Peter Coatesa s Nature is an engaging book, written in a lucid and accessible style and enlivened by the authora s wry humour. Professor Peter Burke, Emmanuel College, Cambridge Coatesa prose is lively and his critical perspactive engaging...students and general readers will find this an enjoyable and thought--provoking introduction to some of the key ideas and debates within environmental history. Andrea Gaynor, University of Western Australia a Peter Coatesa s book is a welcome, updated introduction to environmental history. Presuming no prior knowledge of the field on the part of his readers, Coates confirms the disciplinea s status as one of the most enthralling...pursuits within historical studies (p.viii). Though faced with a monumental task of synthesis -- even within a considerably narrowed scope -- Coates succeeds admirably.a Journal of the History of the Behavioural Sciences


"""Common green wisdom attributes modern treatment of the environment to all sorts of legacies from history, usually Western, Judaeo-Christian and capitalist. Peter Coates examines all the usual suspects, from the Ancient Greeks, to Renaissance man and the thinkers of the Enlightenment, and no less critically the usual eco-heroes, from St Francis and the Zen Buddhists to the American Indians. He places shifting ideas and attitudes in the full and proper context of their time, and rightly condemns the tendency to raid the past for handy quotations to legitimize the campaigns of the present. He shows us how landscapes in England and elsewhere are related to these ideas, particularly show pieces like National Trust properties and American National Parks, but they are often landscapes of dispossession as well as landscapes of conservation. He takes us into the immediate antecedents of modern environmentalism and shows us a green side to Engels and (alarmingly) to Himmler as well as to Wordsworth and William Morris. Always judicious, Peter Coates's book will prove the best possible guide to the history of environmental ideas. Anyone who seriously wants to find a way through the maze of the past and to judge how we have arrived at the present and who prizes scholarship above polemics, will need to read this book."" Professor T. C. Smout, Institute for Environmental History, University of St Andrews ""For some years it has struck me as intriguing that there is no good recent history of nature - though in a sense hardly surprising since one could not imagine a more daunting subject for a historian to tackle.... I am delighted to say that Peter Coates's text fills the bill particularly well: it is clear, cogent, comprehensive, and well organized.... This is a stunning book."" Roy Porter, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine ""I am very impressed with this book. It offers much more depth on most of the historical periods than any other book I've read.... and I couldn't stop reading it."" Michael Barbour, University of California, ""Peter Coates's Nature is an engaging book, written in a lucid and accessible style and enlivened by the author's wry humour."" Professor Peter Burke, Emmanuel College, Cambridge ""Coates' prose is lively and his critical perspactive engaging...students and general readers will find this an enjoyable and thought-provoking introduction to some of the key ideas and debates within environmental history."" Andrea Gaynor, University of Western Australia 'Peter Coates's book is a welcome, updated introduction to environmental history. Presuming no prior knowledge of the field on the part of his readers, Coates confirms the discipline's ""status as one of the most enthralling...pursuits within historical studies"" (p.viii). Though faced with a monumental task of synthesis - even within a considerably narrowed scope - Coates succeeds admirably.' Journal of the History of the Behavioural Sciences"


A scholarly book on the history of the Western relationship to nature, this book will be useful for university students as well as students of environmental matters who wish to probe beyond the issues of the day. The book traces the emergence of human ideas about nature in ancient Greece and Rome and through early Christianity, and follows that thread to the present day. Coates's research and inclusion of sources is encyclopedic in every era and the scholarship is well documented in the notes section and in the index. This is academic writing, clearly written but definitely not aimed at the general reader. (Kirkus UK)


Author Information

Peter Coates is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Historical Studies at the University of Bristol.

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