Analysis Of American Environmental History

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In the first chapter of American Environmental History: An Introduction, Carolyn Merchant looks at numerous different native cultures and civilizations, and how their ways of life were altered by European colonization. She starts by discussing the Beringia Theory – which is the idea that people originally travelled to the Americas when sea levels dropped drastically, revealing the Bering Land Bridge, and allowing for migrations from Asia to North America. Merchant then describes why the Americas were ideal for use – the land possessed “the natural resources required for agricultural and commercial systems.” She lists numerous different native cultures, describing each and how they were (or weren’t) affected by colonization. The cultures are …show more content…

It’s really interesting to me how different this history – which may or may not be the truth, as Zinn notes himself – is from what I learned in school. We’re taught to celebrate the explorers who so heroically discovered the land, but that’s clearly a load of bad stuff. In high school I learned a bit more about the negative aspects of the colonizers, but nothing near the extent of what Zinn describes in this chapter. I wouldn’t use the word desensitized to describe myself, but I am definitely becoming less and less surprised the more I read (especially after I took a class that explored the anthropology of human rights), which I think is somewhat frightening, that I’ve just become accustomed to reading about atrocious events and …show more content…

To me, it almost seemed like White and Cronon looked at all of the other readings, took the ideas, and molded it all into this paper. Like Merchant, White and Cronon look at the different ways of life that NAs had in different locations – namely, the Northeast, the Southwest, and the Plains – the same places discussed in American Environmental History: An Introduction, and noting a lot of the same things as well. However, a lot of new things are noted as well, such as the fact that Southwest Apache NAs shaped their landscape using fire – though this method of agriculture is discussed at length in Whitney’s Preservers of the ecological balance wheel. Like Zinn, Berkhofer, and Dunbar-Oritz, they look at the widely held myths that continue to persist around Native Americans. And, also like the other readings, White and Merchant discuss the impacts that the European settlers had on the NA’s ways of life, namely the introduction of diseases, the fur trade, and domesticated

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