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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John Warfield SimpsonPublisher: University of California Press Imprint: University of California Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.816kg ISBN: 9780520213647ISBN 10: 0520213645 Pages: 398 Publication Date: 15 April 1999 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Prelude: Landscape Vision I. Paradise Lost, Paradise Found 2. Actions and Outcomes Forest Cathedral 3* Designs for a National Landscape 4* Westward the Course of Empire 5* Landscape: Myth and Reality 6. Pilgrims' Progress 7* Looking Ahead, Looking Back Out of Sight, Out of Mind 8. The View from Afar 9* The View from Within ' IO. A Tale of Two Parks II. The Greater Good Time Travel I2. Widening the Circle I3. Litigating the Land I4. The Emotional Landscape Forgotten Sensations I5* Remaking Urban America 16. Dream Weavers I7. America's Landscape Architect I8. City as Suburb Hearing the Echoes I9. A Last Look Notes Works Cited IndexReviews"""A vivid survey. Simpson crafts fine sentences and tells his stories well.His vignettes should captivate newcomers to the dramatic encounters betweenUS history and American nature. . ."" --Times Literary Supplement, 1/21" A well-conceived if sometimes plodding essay in the role of the landscape in American history. Writing in the tradition of Donald Meinig, J.B. Jackson, and other proponents of what might be called the environmental-determinist school of history, Simpson (Architecture and Natural Resources/Ohio State Univ.) explores changing ideas of nationhood as the US grew west of the fall line. The original colonial world, he writes, was one of forests and rivers, and the land outside the cities and well-tended fields was, for most Americans, a dark, fearful, unholy place full of Indians and dangerous beasts. That view came to be transformed by the acquisition of new lands - not only other forests in places such as Ohio, whose wildness would quickly be stripped away, but also the great prairies, deserts, and mountain ranges west of the Mississippi River. Initially, Simpson suggests, the American spirit toward the land was one of wasteful domination. He writes, for instance, that early farming practices tended to deplete the fertility of the soil, for farmers didn't rotate crops or use sufficient natural fertilizers; most [farmers], he says, thought those practices a waste of time since land was cheap and labor dear. It took decades before the nation developed anything like a comprehensive view of land management or arrived at a uniform system of surveying, largely because different colonial regions had contrary attitudes about such things; the South tended to employ haphazard means of measuring land holdings, whereas New Englanders were far more precise. As time went on, however, Americans came to develop a uniform system of land management and, more important, to value the land more highly in the country's idea of itself - a nation not only of farms and cities, but also of natural wonders, like Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon. A useful addition to the growing landscape-in-history literature. (Kirkus Reviews) A vivid survey. Simpson crafts fine sentences and tells his stories well.His vignettes should captivate newcomers to the dramatic encounters betweenUS history and American nature. . . --Times Literary Supplement, 1/21 Author InformationJohn Warfield Simpson is Associate Professor in the Knowlton School of Architecture and the School of Natural Resources at Ohio State University. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |