Georgetown Environmental History
  • Home
  • EH@G Blog
  • Coming Up
    • Conferences >
      • Past Conferences >
        • 2016 Conference
        • 2017 Conference
  • People
  • PhD
    • Student Publications
    • Courses
  • Contact

Georgetown at ASEH 2016: Environmental History and its Publics

3/27/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
Several Georgetown University scholars will participate in the annual conference of the American Society for Environmental History, taking place this week at the Westin Hotel in Seattle, Washington. See below for details on the relevant panels, roundtables and events.

Thursday March 31: 

Professor Dagomar Degroot chairs the informal Climate History Network lunch at 11:30 a.m. at Icon Grill.

Doctoral candidate Adrienne Kates presents 'Capitalism and Maya Autonomy in Mexico's Forest Frontier, 1902-1945', on the panel 'Landscapes and Peoples in the Yucatán, 1500-Present' from 1 to 2:30 p.m., in the Adams room. 

Dr. Andrea Williams (PhD 2013) presents 'French Foresters Abroad: French Empire and the Nineteenth-Century Evolution of Forest Science', on the panel 'Trees Crossing Borders - Towards a Transnational History of Forestry' from 3 to 4:30 p.m., in the Olympic room.


Read More
0 Comments

To Attend: CUNY Workshop on Medicine and Knowledge in the Middle East, feat. Chris Gratien and Graham Pitts, 1 April 2016

3/22/2016

1 Comment

 
On Friday, April 1, 2016, The Graduate Center at the City University of New York hosts a one-day workshop on Medicine and Knowledge in the Middle East. The third panel of the workshop, 'Environments of Other Wars', features the work of Dr. Chris Gratien (PhD, 2015) on “Year of the Mosquito: Displacement and Disease in the Ottoman Empire during WWI” and doctoral candidate Graham Pitts on “War as the Vector of Malaria in Twentieth-Century Lebanon.” Their panel will be moderated by Professor Alan Mikhail of Yale University.

The workshop will take place in Room C198 of the CUNY Graduate Center, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. with a break for lunch. RSVP to Seçil Yılmaz (syilmaz@gradcenter.cuny.edu) to confirm attendance. All workshop participants are asked to read the papers in advance of the meeting.

Full details of the workshop are available here

Read More
1 Comment

Winter Paper Workshop: Consuming Fish, Wheat, and Tea

2/20/2016

0 Comments

 
When: Thursday, February 25, 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.

Where: ICC 662

What:

​The Environmental History working group is pleased to announce the details of our Winter student paper workshop.
 
Meredith Denning presents Useful Failures: Institutional Capacity Building and ‘Fishing Up’ the lower Great Lakes, 1906-1954, a working chapter of her dissertation on international environmental cooperation in the Great Lakes region of North America. This chapter analyzes how Canada and the United States tried to cope with the decline of the commercial fisheries on the Great Lakes. The chapter covers formal sorts of international cooperation like treaties as well as informal ones like professional networking, joint research and ad hoc lobbying. The chapter highlights the catalytic effect of abrupt changes in the Lakes’ environment and the importance of local people’s perceptions of those changes.
 
Meredith will also provide a brief introduction to her dissertation project and a detailed outline of another chapter that deals with attempts to address water quality problems along the international boundary.
 
 
Graham Cornwell presents Harvesting Wheat, Drinking Tea: Consumption and the Environment in Colonial Morocco, a conference paper that looks at how the Moroccan taste for imported gunpowder, green tea and refined sugar took shape through state interventions in moments of drought and severe food shortages. The paper begins in the decades prior to colonial rule, when the makhzan (the Moroccan state under the sultan) supplied tea and sugar alongside grain in its attempts to relieve hunger across the empire. Cornwell then traces state hunger relief efforts through the 1930s, when, following a series of droughts and a burgeoning anti-colonial movement, the French launched a series of reforms aimed at stabilizing colonial control through the improvement of indigenous standards of living. 
 

​Please RSVP to Jackson Perry (jrp77@georgetown.edu) to receive copies of the papers. A light dinner will be provided.
0 Comments

​African Environments and their Populations: April 23, 2016

1/20/2016

0 Comments

 
When: April 8, 2016

Where: Georgetown University 

What:

This one-day workshop will explore African Environments and their Populations. Humanistic approaches to the study of environments over the last several decades opened intellectual space for new fields of humanities and social science research on topics like climate change. Indeed, the anthropocentric approach dominates both environmental and climate studies in disciplines ranging from history to anthropology to critical theory. Consensus is growing around the value of concepts like the Anthropocene and the place of the humanities and social sciences in contributing to the research agenda undergirding policy about the environment and the changing climate. But, these developments have generally unfolded in isolation from other developments in the humanities and related fields that take seriously the study of non-human populations of environments, often in changing climate regimes. Scholars in a number of humanistic disciplines have recognized the need to study animals, pathogens, and even trees through humanities approaches. New thematic fields of research (and journals) are emerging for these approaches, of which the best known is Animal Studies. We seek to put into conversation traditionally anthropocentric approaches to the study of African environments—including under new and historical climate regimes—with emerging humanities approaches to the many other kinds of non-human populations that also live in African environments. We hope some of these connections will emerge in individual papers, while others will develop as we draw out links between papers during the workshop. We are thrilled to feature the scholarship of confirmed speakers Nancy Jacobs and Sandra Swart as well as the participation of a cohort of Georgetown colleagues who work in environmental humanities beyond the African context. 
0 Comments

"The Digital Humanities and Born-Digital Sources: Web Archives, Tweets and the Record of Today"

1/18/2016

0 Comments

 
When: Friday, February 19, 5:00 - 7:00 PM

Where: ICC 662

What: 

​In this instalment of the Digital Humanities Seminar series, Dr. Ian Milligan, an assistant professor of digital and Canadian history at the University of Waterloo, will talk about his work as Principal Investigator of the federally and provincially-funded “Web Archives for Historical Research Group.” Milligan explores the challenges and possibilities of digital data for historical reconstruction. 
0 Comments

Early Modern Global History Seminar: "Climate Change and the Dutch Wars of Independence, 1564-1648"

1/18/2016

0 Comments

 
When: Friday, January 29, 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Where: ICC 662

What:

In this instalment of the Early Modern Global History Seminar Series, we will discuss a paper from Professor Dagomar Degroot that links climate change to the course of the Dutch Wars of Independence. The discussion will be followed by a social hour. 

All students, faculty, and independent scholars are invited to attend. To receive a copy of the paper for discussion, email Sara Keck.

0 Comments

A conversation with Adam Rome

1/18/2016

0 Comments

 
When: Friday, January 29, 1:00 PM-3:00 PM

Where: ICC 450

What:


​Join us for a conversation with Adam Rome, a celebrated historian of American environmentalism. Author of Bulldozer in the Countryside and The Genius of Earth Day, Professor Rome teaches environmental history and environmental nonfiction at the University of Delaware, as Unidel Helen Gouldner Chair for the Environment. 
0 Comments

Mountains and Their Discontents: Reflections on the Environmental History of the Modern Mediterranean, Lebanon and the Moroccan Rif

12/17/2015

0 Comments

 
When: 19 November 2016, 6:00-7:30.

Where: ICC 662

What:


PhD fellows Jackson Perry and Graham Pitts will present two papers on the environmental history of the Mediterranean region. Graham's presentation will be a discussion of the first chapters of his dissertation, and Jackson's will be a warm-up for his MESA
conference presentation on 23 November. 

Presentations will be followed by ample time for suggestions and critique on content and delivery. Dinner will be served. ​
0 Comments
Forward>>


    ​Past Events

    December 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    July 2019
    October 2017
    September 2017
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015

    Categories

    All
    Conferences

    RSS Feed

  • Home
  • EH@G Blog
  • Coming Up
    • Conferences >
      • Past Conferences >
        • 2016 Conference
        • 2017 Conference
  • People
  • PhD
    • Student Publications
    • Courses
  • Contact