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Volumn 36, Issue 1, 2010, Pages 3-21

Humans, cities, and nature: How do cities fit in the material world?

Author keywords

Built environment; Declensionism; Urban ecology; Urban environment

Indexed keywords

NATURE-SOCIETY RELATIONS; URBAN ECOSYSTEM; URBAN HISTORY;

EID: 77949639213     PISSN: 00961442     EISSN: 15526771     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1177/0096144209349876     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (41)

References (104)
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    • Some may argue that one cannot separate nature as place from nature as social construct, but I am admitting to being quite literal in the use of the word as some sort of place "out there" in this article. Among studies that deal with the social construction of nature, see volume 11 (Winter 1987) of Environmental Review, which devotes the whole issue to the topic
    • Some may argue that one cannot separate nature as place from nature as social construct, but I am admitting to being quite literal in the use of the word as some sort of place "out there" in this article. Among studies that deal with the social construction of nature, see volume 11 (Winter 1987) of Environmental Review, which devotes the whole issue to the topic.
  • 2
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    • The "built environment" normally is used to describe urban development. In reality it is anything constructed by humans
    • The "built environment" normally is used to describe urban development. In reality it is anything constructed by humans.
  • 4
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    • Cities, environments, and european history
    • Genevieve Massard-Guilbaud and Peter Thorsheim, " Cities, Environments, and European History, " Journal of Urban History 33 (July 2007). 692.
    • (2007) Journal of Urban History , vol.33 , pp. 692
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    • Observations on the nature and culture of environmental history
    • John R. McNeill, " Observations on the Nature and Culture of Environmental History, " History and Theory 42 (December 2003). 6-7.
    • (2003) History and Theory , vol.42 , pp. 6-7
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    • Investigating urban infrastructure
    • For more on urban environmental history, see
    • Douglas E. Kupel, "Investigating Urban Infrastructure," Journal of Urban History 27 (May 2001): 520. For more on urban environmental history
    • Journal of Urban History 27 (May 2001) , pp. 520
    • Douglas, E.K.1
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    • Urban history and environmental history in the United States: Complementary and overlapping fields
    • ed. Christoph Bernhardt (Munster: Waxman, 2001)
    • Joel A. Tarr, "Urban History and Environmental History in the United States: Complementary and Overlapping Fields," in Environmental Problems in European Cities in the 19th and 20th Century, ed. Christoph Bernhardt (Munster: Waxman, 2001): 25-39
    • Environmental Problems in European Cities in the 19th and 20th Century , pp. 25-39
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    • The place of the city in environmental history
    • (Spring)
    • Martin V. Melosi, "The Place of the City in Environmental History," Environmental History Review 17 (Spring 1993): 1-23
    • (1993) Environmental History Review , vol.17 , pp. 1-23
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    • The importance of an urban perspective in environmental history
    • Christine M. Rosen and Joel A. Tarr, "The Importance of an Urban Perspective in Environmental History," Journal of Urban History 20 (1994): 299-310. Samuel P. Hays has been less impressed with the overall performance of urban environmental history as a new subdiscipline. As he argued
    • (1994) Journal of Urban History , vol.20 , pp. 299-310
    • Christine, M.R.1    Joel, A.T.2
  • 11
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    • The city has become a relatively new focus for environmental history. The effect of studies with an urban focus, however, has been minimal, largely because its practitioners have been more vigorous in asserting urban environmental history as content rather than perspective
    • The city has become a relatively new focus for environmental history. The effect of studies with an urban focus, however, has been minimal, largely because its practitioners have been more vigorous in asserting urban environmental history as content rather than perspective
  • 12
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    • Haysg major point was that "There is much to urban environmental history that goes beyond urban boundaries."
    • Haysg major point was that "There is much to urban environmental history that goes beyond urban boundaries." See
  • 13
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    • Toward integration in environmental history
    • (February 1) See also Hays, Explorations in Environmental History: Essays by Samuel P. Hays (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998)
    • Samuel P. Hays, "Toward Integration in Environmental History," Pacific Historical Review 70 (February 1, 2001): 59-67. See also Hays, Explorations in Environmental History: Essays by Samuel P. Hays (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1998), 70-77.
    • (2001) Pacific Historical Review , vol.70 , pp. 59-67
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  • 14
    • 26944476742 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Environmental history: Watching a historical field mature
    • Richard White, " Environmental History: Watching a Historical Field Mature, " Pacific Historical Review 70 (February 2001). 103.
    • (2001) Pacific Historical Review , vol.70 , pp. 103
    • Richard, W.1
  • 15
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    • (New York: Columbia University Press) Merchantgs views on humans and nature are, of course, decidedly more complex. In a recent work she makes clear the need to appreciate that
    • Carolyn Merchant, The Columbia Guide to American Environmental History (New York: Columbia University Press, 2002) p. 100. Merchantgs views on humans and nature are, of course, decidedly more complex. In a recent work she makes clear the need to appreciate that
    • (2002) The Columbia Guide to American Environmental History , pp. 100
    • Carolyn, M.1
  • 16
    • 77952612780 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • We should think of ourselves not as dominant over nature (controlling and managing a passive, external nature) or of nature as dominant over us (casting humans as victims of an unpredictable, violent nature) but rather in dynamic relationship to nature as its partner
    • We should think of ourselves not as dominant over nature (controlling and managing a passive, external nature) or of nature as dominant over us (casting humans as victims of an unpredictable, violent nature) but rather in dynamic relationship to nature as its partner.
  • 18
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    • I must admit that one of my earliest attempts at defining urban environmental history in the early 1990s also failed to intertwine nature and the city in any meaningful way
    • I must admit that one of my earliest attempts at defining urban environmental history in the early 1990s also failed to intertwine nature and the city in any meaningful way:
  • 19
    • 77952650909 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ⋯ the physical features and resources of urban sites (and regions) influence and are shaped by natural forces, growth, spatial change and development, and human action. Thus the field combines the study of the natural history of the city with the history of city building and their possible intersections
    • ⋯ the physical features and resources of urban sites (and regions) influence and are shaped by natural forces, growth, spatial change and development, and human action. Thus the field combines the study of the natural history of the city with the history of city building and their possible intersections.
  • 22
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    • Transformations of the earth: Toward an agroecological perspective in history
    • Donald Worster, "Transformations of the Earth: Toward an Agroecological Perspective in History," Journal of American History 76 (1990): 1087-106.
    • (1990) Journal of American History , vol.76 , pp. 1087-106
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  • 24
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    • Environmental history: Profile of a developing field
    • See (May)
    • See Mart A. Stewart, "Environmental History: Profile of a Developing Field," The History Teacher 31 (May 1998): 351-68.
    • (1998) The History Teacher , vol.31 , pp. 351-368
    • Mart, A.S.1
  • 25
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    • Versions of the environment
    • (May 1998)
    • Bill Luckin, "Versions of the Environment," Journal of Urban History 24 (May 1998): 510
    • Journal of Urban History , vol.24 , pp. 510
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    • Urban nature and the ecological imaginary
    • See also ed. Nik Heynen, Maria Kaika, and Erik Swyngedouw (London: Routledge)
    • See also Matthew Gandy, "Urban Nature and the Ecological Imaginary," in In the Nature of Cities: Urban Political Ecology and the Politics of Urban Metabolism, ed. Nik Heynen, Maria Kaika, and Erik Swyngedouw (London: Routledge, 2006), 63.
    • (2006) The Nature of Cities: Urban Political Ecology and the Politics of Urban Metabolism , pp. 63
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  • 27
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    • John McNeill takes issue with the criticism that environmental historygs narrative "are relentlessly depressing accounts of environmental destruction: just one damn decline after another." "I regard the criticism," he concludes, "as misplaced." J. R. McNeill, "Observations on the Nature and Culture of Environmental History," History and Theory, Theme Issue 42 (December 2003): 35
    • John McNeill takes issue with the criticism that environmental historygs narrative "are relentlessly depressing accounts of environmental destruction: just one damn decline after another." "I regard the criticism," he concludes, "as misplaced." J. R. McNeill, "Observations on the Nature and Culture of Environmental History," History and Theory, Theme Issue 42 (December 2003): 35.
  • 28
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    • (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) Emmanuel Kreike posed a similar definition of the declensionist narrative: "The declinist paradigm construed human interference in pristine Nature as a disturbance typically resulting in a downward spiraling process of environmental degradation that might ultimately lead to the destruction of ecosystem Earth."
    • William B. Meyer, Human Impact on the Earth (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 2-3. Emmanuel Kreike posed a similar definition of the declensionist narrative: "The declinist paradigm construed human interference in pristine Nature as a disturbance typically resulting in a downward spiraling process of environmental degradation that might ultimately lead to the destruction of ecosystem Earth."
    • (1996) Human Impact on the Earth , pp. 2-3
    • William, B.M.1
  • 29
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    • The nature-culture trap: A critique of late 20th century global paradigms of environmental change in africa and beyond
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    • See Emmanuel Kreike, "The Nature-Culture Trap: A Critique of Late 20th Century Global Paradigms of Environmental Change in Africa and Beyond," Global Environment 1 (2008): 119.
    • (2008) Global Environment , vol.1 , pp. 119
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    • See (New York: Harcourt Inc.) [1961] 451, 528, 540, 571
    • See Lewis Mumford, The City in History (New York: Harcourt Inc., 1989 [1961]), 446-47, 451, 528, 540, 571.
    • (1989) The City in History , pp. 446-47
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  • 31
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    • Tarr, "Urban History and Environmental History in the United States," 26-29. For a similar perspective, see Howard Bridgman, Robin Warner, and John Dodson, Urban Biophysical Environments (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1995), xv, 1, 56
    • Tarr, "Urban History and Environmental History in the United States," 26-29. For a similar perspective, see Howard Bridgman, Robin Warner, and John Dodson, Urban Biophysical Environments (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1995), xv, 1, 56.
  • 34
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    • Afterword, environmental history: Watching a historical field mature
    • Richard White, " Afterword, Environmental History: Watching a Historical Field Mature, " Pacific Historical Review 70 (February 2001). 105.
    • (2001) Pacific Historical Review , vol.70 , pp. 105
    • Richard, W.1
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    • (a new edition of Man and Nature) (New York: Charles Scribnergs Sons, 1882)
    • George Perkins Marsh, The Earth as Modified by Human Action (a new edition of Man and Nature) (New York: Charles Scribnergs Sons, 1882), 10.
    • The Earth As Modified by Human Action , pp. 10
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    • I note the larger issue of "What is Nature?" as an element in this discourse, but a deep exploration of this question may stray cosmically from my more specific interest of nature and the built environment. I say this with a certain sense of trepidation and with an understanding of the potentially intellectual peril in which in places me, especially among social constructionists and postmodernists. Nonetheless, for one very useful study on this broader and vital question
    • I note the larger issue of "What is Nature?" as an element in this discourse, but a deep exploration of this question may stray cosmically from my more specific interest of nature and the built environment. I say this with a certain sense of trepidation and with an understanding of the potentially intellectual peril in which in places me, especially among social constructionists and postmodernists. Nonetheless, for one very useful study on this broader and vital question
  • 41
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    • The past and present of environmental history
    • Alfred W. Crosby, " The Past and Present of Environmental History, " American Historical Review 100 (October 1995). 1177-1189.
    • (1995) American Historical Review , vol.100 , pp. 1177-1189
    • Alfred, W.C.1
  • 45
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    • Ibid., 446
    • Ibid., 446.
  • 46
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    • Ibid., 443-44
    • Ibid., 443-44.
  • 47
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    • 2nd ed. ( Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall
    • Marston Bates, Man in Nature, 2 nd ed. (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1964). 1.
    • (1964) Man in Nature , pp. 1
    • Marston, B.1
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    • Ibid., 1-2
    • Ibid., 1-2.
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    • The relations of environmental history and historical geography
    • Michael Williams, " The Relations of Environmental History and Historical Geography, " Journal of Historical Geography 20 (1994). 13.
    • (1994) Journal of Historical Geography , vol.20 , pp. 13
    • Michael, W.1
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    • Between space and time: Reflections on the geographical imagination
    • See, for example
    • See, for example, David Harvey, "Between Space and Time: Reflections on the Geographical Imagination," Annals of the Association of American Geographers 80 (September 1990): 418-34.
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    • David, H.1
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    • Ibid. See also Yi-Fu Tuan, Man and Nature Resource Paper No. 10 (Washington, DC: Association of American Geographers, Commission on College Geography, 1971), 3-7
    • Ibid. See also Yi-Fu Tuan, Man and Nature Resource Paper No. 10 (Washington, DC: Association of American Geographers, Commission on College Geography, 1971), 3-7.
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    • Rather than subject the internal structures of social systems to critical scrutiny, such studies (like Diamond) seem to assume a simple dualism of society versus nature and to account for environmental problems in terms of the inexorable progression of technology or demography.... Rarer are historical studies that explicitly investigate contradictions within global human society over the natural environment
    • Rather than subject the internal structures of social systems to critical scrutiny, such studies (like Diamond) seem to assume a simple dualism of society versus nature and to account for environmental problems in terms of the inexorable progression of technology or demography.... Rarer are historical studies that explicitly investigate contradictions within global human society over the natural environment.
  • 57
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    • Approaches to environmental history: A field guide to its concepts
    • See also ed. Jozsef Laszlovszky and Ptere Szabo (Budapest: Central European University, Department of Medieval Studies & Archaeolingua) in which she states not unlike McNeill
    • See also Verena Winiwarter, "Approaches to Environmental History: A Field Guide to Its Concepts," in People and Nature in Historical Perspective, ed. Jozsef Laszlovszky and Ptere Szabo (Budapest: Central European University, Department of Medieval Studies & Archaeolingua, 2003), 4-5, in which she states not unlike McNeill
    • (2003) People and Nature in Historical Perspective , pp. 4-5
    • Verena, W.1
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    • My work as an environmental historian is done with great respect for naturegs intricacy. It is based on an understanding of the dangers of human impacts on natural systems and ultimately on the presupposition that humans are part of nature as much as they are apart from it... As two colleagues have put it, environmental history is about the interactions between "humans and the rest of nature," a definition I subscribe to
    • My work as an environmental historian is done with great respect for naturegs intricacy. It is based on an understanding of the dangers of human impacts on natural systems and ultimately on the presupposition that humans are part of nature as much as they are apart from it... As two colleagues have put it, environmental history is about the interactions between "humans and the rest of nature," a definition I subscribe to.
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    • ed. Donna Haraway (New York: Routledge, 1991)
    • Donna Haraway, "A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century," in Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature, ed. Donna Haraway (New York: Routledge, 1991), 150.
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    • Society as hybrid between material and symbolic realms: Towards a theoretical framework of society-nature interaction
    • (Autumn)
    • Marina Fischer-Kowalski and Helga Weisz, "Society as Hybrid Between Material and Symbolic Realms: Towards a Theoretical Framework of Society-Nature Interaction," Advances in Human Ecology 8 (Autumn 1999): 215-51.
    • (1999) Advances in Human Ecology , vol.8 , pp. 215-51
    • Marina, F.-K.1    Helga, W.2
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    • Another straightforward definition: "Within the natural sciences, the term urban ecologyg is used to refer to biological and ecological studies conducted in areas with high densities of human." See Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne
    • Another straightforward definition: "Within the natural sciences, the term ĝ€urban ecologyg is used to refer to biological and ecological studies conducted in areas with high densities of human." See "What is Urban Ecology?" Royal Botanic Gardens, Melbourne, http://www.rbgmelb.org.au/arcue/pg5-html.html.
    • What is Urban Ecology?
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    • Societygs metabolism: The intellectual history of materials flow analysis, Part I, 1860-1970
    • See Marina Fischer-Kowalski, "Societygs Metabolism: The Intellectual History of Materials Flow Analysis, Part I, 1860-1970," Journal of Industrial Ecology 2 (1998): 61-78
    • (1998) Journal of Industrial Ecology , vol.2 , pp. 61-78
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    • Societygs metabolism: The intellectual history of materials flow analysis, Part II, 1970-1998
    • Marina Fischer-Kowalski, "Societygs Metabolism: The Intellectual History of Materials Flow Analysis, Part II, 1970-1998," Journal of Industrial Ecology (1999): 107-36.
    • (1999) Journal of Industrial Ecology , pp. 107-36
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    • Urban ecosystems, city planning, and environmental education: Literature, precedents, key concepts, and prospects
    • Berkowitz, Nilon, and Hollweg
    • Anne Whiston Spirn, " Urban Ecosystems, City Planning, and Environmental Education: Literature, Precedents, Key Concepts, and Prospects, " in Understanding Urban Ecosystems, ed. Berkowitz, Nilon, and Hollweg, 201.
    • Understanding Urban Ecosystems , pp. 201
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    • Understanding urban ecosystems: An ecological economics perspective
    • See ed. Alan R. Berkowitz, Charles H. Nilon, and Karen S. Hollweg (New York: Springer)
    • See William Rees, "Understanding Urban Ecosystems: An Ecological Economics Perspective," in Understanding Urban Ecosystems: A New Frontier for Science and Education, ed. Alan R. Berkowitz, Charles H. Nilon, and Karen S. Hollweg (New York: Springer, 1999), 129
    • (1999) Understanding Urban Ecosystems: A New Frontier for Science and Education , pp. 129
    • William, R.1
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    • Breuste, Feldmann, and Uhlmann, eds., Urban Ecology, 4
    • Breuste, Feldmann, and Uhlmann, eds., Urban Ecology, 4.
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    • The concept of urbanism
    • Peter J. Veko, Ruth Tringham, and G. W. Dimbleby (Cambridge, MA: Schenkman
    • Paul Wheatley, " The Concept of Urbanism, " in Man, Settlement and Urbanism, ed. Peter J. Veko, Ruth Tringham, and G. W. Dimbleby (Cambridge, MA: Schenkman, 1972). 606.
    • (1972) Man, Settlement and Urbanism , pp. 606
    • Paul, W.1
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    • Rees, "Understanding Urban Ecosystems," 116
    • Rees, "Understanding Urban Ecosystems," 116.
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    • See ibid., 124-25; Richard Stren, Rodney White, and Joseph Whitney, eds., Sustainable Cities: Urbanization and the Environment in International Perspective (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992)
    • See ibid., 124-25; Richard Stren, Rodney White, and Joseph Whitney, eds., Sustainable Cities: Urbanization and the Environment in International Perspective (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1992).
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    • Twentieth century urban growth: An ecological approach
    • Mark LaGory, " Twentieth Century Urban Growth: An Ecological Approach, " Sociological Focus 12 (August 1979). 187.
    • (1979) Sociological Focus , vol.12 , pp. 187
    • Lagory, M.1
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    • Winiwarter, "Approaches to Environmental History," 11
    • Winiwarter, "Approaches to Environmental History," 11.
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    • Ibid., 3
    • Ibid., 3.
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    • Ibid., 4, 9
    • Ibid., 4, 9.
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    • Ibid., 2
    • Ibid., 2.
  • 89
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    • Ibid., xiii
    • Ibid., xiii.
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    • Ibid., 4, 9
    • Ibid., 4, 9.
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    • Ibid., 4-5
    • Ibid., 4-5.
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    • A place for stories: Nature, history, and narrative
    • William Cronon, " A Place for Stories: Nature, History, and Narrative, " Journal of American History 78 (March 1992). 1369.
    • (1992) Journal of American History , vol.78 , pp. 1369
    • William, C.1
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    • Foreword
    • Heynen, Kaika, and Swyngedouw
    • Neil Smith, " Foreword, " in In the Nature of Cities, ed. Heynen, Kaika, and Swyngedouw, xi - xii.
    • The Nature of Cities
    • Neil, S.1
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    • Metabolic urbanization: The making of cyborg cities
    • Discussion of this latter point can be found in Erik Swyngedouw ed. Heynen, Kaika, and Swyngedouw
    • Discussion of this latter point can be found in Erik Swyngedouw, "Metabolic Urbanization: The Making of Cyborg Cities," in In the Nature of Cities, ed. Heynen, Kaika, and Swyngedouw, 22.
    • The Nature of Cities , pp. 22
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    • The place of nature in the city of man
    • 1. See also Joel A. Tarr, "The City and the Natural Environment," http://www.gdrc.org/uem/doc-tarr.html
    • Ian L. McHarg, "The Place of Nature in the City of Man," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 352 (1964): 1. See also Joel A. Tarr, "The City and the Natural Environment," http://www.gdrc.org/uem/doc-tarr.html.
    • (1964) Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science , pp. 352
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    • McHarg, "The Place of Nature in the City of Man," 5
    • McHarg, "The Place of Nature in the City of Man," 5.
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    • Urban environmental history: The essence of a contradiction
    • (September) 892
    • Bruce Stephenson, "Urban Environmental History: the Essence of a Contradiction," Journal of Urban History 31 (September 2005): 892.
    • (2005) Journal of Urban History , pp. 31
    • Bruce, S.1
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    • Winiwarter, "Approaches to Environmental History," 11. See also Laurie, Nature in Cities, 3-4
    • Winiwarter, "Approaches to Environmental History," 11. See also Laurie, Nature in Cities, 3-4.
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    • Cinnamon and everything not so nice, "Are Humans Part of Nature?" February 23 and 26, 2007, http://www.gather.com/viewArticle. action?articleId=281474976916782
    • Cinnamon and everything not so nice, "Are Humans Part of Nature?" February 23 and 26, 2007, http://www.gather.com/viewArticle. action?articleId=281474976916782.
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    • The city as environment
    • Kevin Lynch, " The City as Environment, " Scientific American 213 (September 1965). 219.
    • (1965) Scientific American , vol.213 , pp. 219
    • Kevin, L.1


* 이 정보는 Elsevier사의 SCOPUS DB에서 KISTI가 분석하여 추출한 것입니다.