Reviews
A new approach to ecology... well worth consideration by ecologists, science historians, and anyone interested in how human ecology should be integrated with the biological sciences.
Kingsland does a masterful job weaving together the history of ecology in the United States.
Kingsland has ambitiously followed the growth of American ecology from the end of the 19th throughout the 20th century, looking at social, economic, and scientific influences... Quite worthwhile for any ecologist interested in the history of their field.
Kingsland breaks new ground by tightly linking the intellectual history of ecological science with changes in the land.
Anyone interested in the history of American ecology and its relationship to our changing perspective on the environment will find this a worthwhile read and a clear exposition of those changes.
In contrast to other historical accounts, Sharon Kingsland’s book emphasizes the ways that human ecology centered in urban settings has shaped the discipline.
The details of how the field began and the accounts of the ecological pioneers make this book an enjoyable account of scientific history.
This fine book provides an excellent opportunity to reflect back on the ecological sciences and their entanglement with environmental concerns in the USA... A refreshing and novel approach that breaks new grounds in our understanding of how ecology became a dominating scientific approach to the environment.
Deeply researched and well written, Kingsland's study is likely to become a standard reference for scholars from many fields.
An important, innovative scholarly contribution that nicely captures both the excitement and frustration of American botanists as they struggled to professionalize their discipline. Kingsland does a marvelous job of reconstructing the American botanical landscape during a crucial period in its development.
Book Details
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Struggle for Place
1. Entrepreneurs of Science
2. A Botanical Revolution
3. Big Science
4. Science in a Changing Land
5. Visioning Ecology
6. Science, History, and Progress
7
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Struggle for Place
1. Entrepreneurs of Science
2. A Botanical Revolution
3. Big Science
4. Science in a Changing Land
5. Visioning Ecology
6. Science, History, and Progress
7. A Subversive Science?
8. Defining the Ecosystem
9. New Frontiers
Conclusion: Expanding the Dialogue
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index