Environmental restoration is now a widespread pursuit, as landscape designers, engineers, and professional biologists seek to restore degraded landscapes to some previous, more desirable, state. In this prize-winning work, Marcus Hall shows that such restoration is not a new endeavor but an idea with strong roots in the nineteenth century, particularly in the work of the pioneering American conservationist, George Perkins Marsh. While Marsh served as the American ambassador to Italy from 1861 to 1881, he wrote his influential work, Man and Nature, which Hall calls "the world's first comprehensive warning of the human propensity to degrade natural systems."
By examining the history of restoration in both the United States and Italy since 1850, Hall reveals how the idea and practice of "restoration" shifts according to time, place, and culture. After establishing the historic influences that distinguish restoration in Italy (where the emphasis is on preserving the pastoral) and the United States (where the emphasis is on wilderness), Hall discusses the long-term restoration of two damaged watersheds, one in the Italian Alps (1850-1950) and the other in the Rocky Mountains (1910-1970). Restorationists gave different answers about how and what to restore. By contrasting land management in these two countries and elsewhere, this book clarifies the different meanings of restoration, shows how such meanings change from place to place in different times, and suggests how restorationists can apply these insights to their own practices. The book should appeal to scholars and students in landscape studies, environmental studies, conservation and preservation, and professionals and practitioners in these and related fields
An earlier version of this manuscript was awarded the Rachel Carson Prize as the best doctoral dissertation in environmental history by the American Society for Environmental History. Also chapter 4, about early restoration efforts in the American West, was awarded the 2002 Ray Allen Billington Prize by the Western History Association. Marcus Hall's dissertation adviser was William Cronon, a leading scholar in environmental history and author of Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West.
Although there are as yet no comparable books on Virginia's backlist, Yale published a heavily ilustrated book, Grove and Rackham THE NATURE OF MEDITERRANEAN EUROPE, $75.00 that sold 500 copies in US and 700 through the UK office.
Industry Reviews
A landmark in environmental history, Earth Repair offers major new insights into conservation ideas and practices derived from comparative analysis in the Old World and the New World, including sophisticated vignettes of efforts to curb disasters and reform land management in the Alps and the Rockies. This wonderfully written book also shows how the contrasts noted by Americans and Italians abroad now reaffirmed, now reshaped, national views on why and how to conserve. --David Lowenthal, author of George Perkins Marsh: Prophet of Conservation
Although many people tend to think of ecological restoration as a very recent development in environmentalism, it in fact has much deeper roots than they realize. This pioneering study is thus an invaluable contribution not just to comparative environmental history, but to contemporary restoration efforts as well. --author of William Cronon, editor of Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature
Ecological restoration appears to most of us as a novel, churning, exuberant practice in search of a solution to the 20th century. Marc Hall exposes the traditions underlying restoration that extend much farther back and are culturally crossed. For North American readers it is good to be reminded that restoration did not begin as an idea or practice only in the 1930s American Midwest (no matter how important these developments were). With this terrific book Marc Hall is emerging as the historian laureate of the restoration movement.. --Eric Higgs, former chair for Society of Ecological Restoration International