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HISTORIES OF HUMAN CONSTRUCTIONS OF NATURE Wild Things: Nature and
the Social Imagination assembles eleven substantive and original
essays on the cultural and social dimensions of environmental
history. They address a global cornucopia of social and ecological
systems, from Africa to Europe, North America and the Caribbean,
and their temporal range extends from the 1830s into the
twenty-first century. The imaginative (and actual) construction of
landscapes and the appropriation of Nature - through
image-fashioning, curating museum and zoo collections, making
'friends', 'enemies' and mythical symbols from animals - are
recurring subjects. Among the volume's thought-provoking essays are
a group enmeshing nature and the visual culture of photography and
film. Canonical environmental history themes, from colonialism to
conservation, are re-inflected by discourses including gender
studies, Romanticism, politics and technology. The loci of the
studies included here represent both the microcosmic - underwater
laboratory, zoo, film studio; and broad canvases - the German
forest, the Rocky Mountains, the islands of Haiti and Madagascar.
Their casts too are richly varied - from Britain's otters and
Africa's Nile crocodiles to Hollywood film-makers and South African
cattle. The volume represents an excitingly diverse collection of
studies of how humans, in imagination and deed, act on and are
acted on by 'wild things'.
A decade on from the 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States,
Australians are embroiled in one of the nation's longest military
conflict-the war in Afghanistan. An Unwinnable War charts the
motives, ambitions and negotiations that carried Australia into
Afghanistan: from the then Prime Minister John Howard's presence in
Washington DC on September 11, 2001 to the 'transition' plan to
hand security to Afghan forces - all played out in the wake of
increasing casualties. Based on interviews with key political and
military figures in Australia and abroad, An Unwinnable War lays
bare the tensions between political and military decision-making,
the nature and potency of the US alliance and the influence of
individual personalities in charting Australia's course in what was
once dubbed the 'good war'.
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