Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 1. Learning from Nature-induced Disasters: Theoretical Considerations and Case Studies from Western Europe Chapter 3 2. Disaster and Political Culture in Germany Since 1500 Chapter 4 3. Summer Frost: A Natural Hazard with Fatal Consequences in Preindustrial Finland Chapter 5 4. Society and Natural Risks in France, 1500-2000: Changing Historical Perspectives Chapter 6 5. Humanitarianism and Colonialism: Religious Responses to the Algerian Drought and Famine of 1866–1870 Chapter 7 6. The Floods of Baghdad: Cultural and Technological Responses Chapter 8 7. Interpreting Earthquakes in Medieval Islamic Texts Chapter 9 8. Famine in Bengal: A Comparison of the 1770 Famine in Bengal and the 1897 Famine in Chotanagpur Chapter 10 9. "Heaven-Sent" Disasters in Late-Imperial China: The Scope of the State and Beyond Chapter 11 10. Cultures of Disaster, Cultures of Coping: Hazard as a Frequent Life Experience in the Philippines Chapter 12 11. The Parana River Floods during the Spanish-Colonial Period: Impact and Responses Chapter 13 12. Documenting Disaster: Archival Investigations of Climate, Crisis, and Catastrophe in Colonial Mexico Chapter 14 13. American Disasters during the Twentieth Century: The Case of New Jersey Chapter 15 Afterword
Christof Mauch is Chair in North American History and Transatlantic Relations at the Amerika-Institut of Munich University. Christian Pfister is a professor in the Department of Economic, Social, and Environmental History at the Institute of History, University of Bern.
Edited by the acknowledged masters of environmental history,
Christof Mauch and Christian Pfister, this absorbing collection
enriches our understanding of how humans at different times and in
different places have dealt with disasters. The unexpected and
dramatic hazards of life on earth—earthquakes, floods, drought,
frost and fires—have brought real suffering, death, famine, and
disease to rich and poor, rural and urban alike. However, as the
expert contributors to this book demonstrate so persuasively from
historical case studies around the world, they have also produced
particular situations that have generated innovative
socio-political, technological and economic coping strategies. This
is an informative and thought-provoking book, not only for its
wealth of information and enormous contribution to the growing
field of disaster history, but it is a timely publication for an
era in which human beings, perhaps more than at any other period in
history, feel vulnerable in the face of growing anthropogenic
catastrophe.
*Jane Carruthers, University of South Africa*
An intriguing collection of essays that examine environmental
history through the lens of natural disasters that have occurred
around the world... informative...absorbing to read and ponder...
highly recommended.
*History In Review, April 2009*
This well-done collection broadens and deepens our understanding of
the history of disasters considerably.... The book is an important
stepping stone in the globalization of environmental history.
*H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online, Winter
2009*
Floods, famines, earthquakes, and other disasters have wrought
havoc throughout history. This book presents studies ranging from
Finland to the Philippines, and from medieval times until today, to
show the diversity of human responses to terrible catastrophes.
Everyone interested in the uneasy relationship between nature and
culture will want to read this book.
*J. R. McNeill, Georgetown University*
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