The Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany - History Book on German Environmental Transformation | Perfect for Students, Historians & Nature Enthusiasts
The Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany - History Book on German Environmental Transformation | Perfect for Students, Historians & Nature Enthusiasts

The Conquest of Nature: Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany - History Book on German Environmental Transformation | Perfect for Students, Historians & Nature Enthusiasts

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"Brilliantly conceived....[A] tour de force in historical writing."―Ian Kershaw Majestic and lyrically written, The Conquest of Nature traces the rise of Germany through the development of water and landscape. David Blackbourn begins his morality tale in the mid-1700s, with the epic story of Frederick the Great, who attempted―by importing the great scientific minds of the West and by harnessing the power of his army―to transform the uninhabitable marshlands of his scattered kingdom into a modern state. Chronicling the great engineering projects that reshaped the mighty Rhine, the emergence of an ambitious German navy, and the development of hydroelectric power to fuel Germany's convulsive industrial growth before World War I, Blackbourn goes on to show how Nazi racial policies rested on German ideas of mastery of the natural world. Filled with striking reproductions of paintings, maps, and photographs, this grand work of modern history links culture, politics, and the environment in an exploration of the perils faced by nations that attempt to conquer nature. 70 illustrations

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

David Blackbourn succeeds to bring together cultural and environmental history. His argument--German's representation of nature mirrored the German state--is not just compelling. Indeed, Blackbourne succeeds with elegance, helped with a series of biographies and case-studies, to support his claim. Nevertheless, some can complain about the absence of the German Empire considering the role played by internal colonization to vanquish nature.