Dawn of Green

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1800s
A01=Harriet Ritvo
academic
activism
activist
Author_Harriet Ritvo
Category=NHTK
Category=RNFD
Category=RNK
city
clean
conservation
conservationist
controversial
controversy
energy
engineering
england
environment
environmental
environmentalist
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
historical
history
industrial
lake district
manchester
modernist
movement
natural
nature
outdoors
pastoral
research
reservoir
resources
scholarly
technology
thirlmere
water
western world

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226720821
  • Weight: 482g
  • Dimensions: 17 x 24mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2009
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Located in the heart of England's Lake District, Thirlmere, with its placid sheen, surrounding evergreens, and apparent lack of pollution or development, seems to epitomize the unadulterated bucolic ideal. But under its calm surface lurks the enduring legacy of a nineteenth-century conflict that pitted industrial progress against natural conservation - and helped launch the environmental movement as we know it. Purchased by the city of Manchester in the 1870s, Thirlmere was dammed and converted into a reservoir, its water piped one hundred miles south to the burgeoning industrial center and its workforce. This feat of civil engineering - and of natural resource diversion - inspired one of the first environmental struggles of modern times. "The Dawn of Green" recreates the battle for Thirlmere and the clashes between conservationists who wished to preserve the lake and developers eager to meet the needs of industry and a growing urban population. Bringing to vivid life the colorful and strong-minded characters who populated both sides of the debate, noted historian Harriet Ritvo revisits notions of the natural promulgated by Romantic poets, recreationists, resource managers, and industrial developers to establish Thirlmere as the template for subsequent - and continuing - environmental struggles. A century after Thirlmere, the demand for water and the control of water rights are among the most pressing political, humanitarian, and environmental concerns of our time. By investigating Victorian ideas about industry, development, and technology, Ritvo shows how the lessons learned in the Lake District can inform and guide modern environmental and conservation campaigns.
Harriet Ritvo is the Arthur J. Conner Professor of History at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and author of The Platypus and the Mermaid, and Other Figments of Classifying Imagination and The Animal Estate: The English and Other Creatures in the Victorian Age.

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