![]()
Download full text
 (external source)
Citation Suggestion
Please use the following Persistent Identifier (PID) to cite this document:
https://doi.org/10.13109/gege.2020.46.4.579
Exports for your reference manager
Writing History in the Anthropocene: Scaling, Accountability, and Accumulation
[journal article]
Abstract We introduce three topics that characterize research in and of the Anthropocene: terrestrial scales (temporal, systemic, and spatial); accountability within and beyond the social, cultural, and political realms of human interaction; and the unprecedented accumulation and redistribution of earth matt... view more
 We introduce three topics that characterize research in and of the Anthropocene: terrestrial scales (temporal, systemic, and spatial); accountability within and beyond the social, cultural, and political realms of human interaction; and the unprecedented accumulation and redistribution of earth matter. Historians are well equipped to both explain social change and expose the historicity of concepts, institutions, individual or collective routines, and experiences. Considering this double interest, along with the methodological renewals of their discipline, historians are able to historicize the terrestrial environment and expose geological and ecological causalities across all scales without losing sight of human dimensions and responsibilities.... view less
Classification
History
Free Keywords
environmental history; earth sciences
Document language
English
Publication Year
2020
Page/Pages
p. 579-605
Journal
Geschichte und Gesellschaft : Zeitschrift für historische Sozialwissenschaft, 46 (2020) 4
Issue topic
Writing History in the Anthropocene
ISSN
2196-9000
Status
Published Version; reviewed