“Down Beside Where the Waters Flow”. Reclaiming Rivers for American Studies (Introduction)
“Down Beside Where the Waters Flow”. Reclaiming Rivers for American Studies (Introduction)
Author(s): Manilo Della Marca, Uwe LübkenSubject(s): Physical Geopgraphy, Environmental Geography, Environmental and Energy policy, Environmental interactions, Editorial
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: Rivers; America; River restoration; Riverscapes;
Summary/Abstract: Over the past three decades, rivers have become a fascinating and popular subject of scholarly interest, not only in the field of environmental history, where river histories have developed into a distinct subgenre (Schönach 2017; Evenden 2018), but also in the emerging field of environmental humanities. In this scholarship, rivers have often been reconceptualized as socio-natural sites where human and non-human actors interact with the natural world, generating complex legacies, path dependencies, and feedback loops (Winiwarter and Schmid 2008). Furthermore, rivers have been described as hybrid “organic machines,” whose energy has been utilized by humans in many different ways, including the harvesting of both hydropower and salmon (White 1995).
Journal: Review of International American Studies
- Issue Year: 14/2021
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 13-24
- Page Count: 12
- Language: English