Description
An examination of the complex relationship between Americans, technology, and their environment over the past several hundred years
About the Author
John Opie is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Environmental History and Policy at the New Jersey Institute of Technology. He is the founding editor of the journal Environmental History and the author of Nature's Nation: An Environmental History of the United States and Ogallala: Water for a Dry Land, available in a Bison Books edition. Opie currently lives on the Indiana Dunes of Lake Michigan and teaches at the University of Chicago.
Reviews
"This is the book for any intelligent, concerned, sensitive person who might be given to weeping over the screech of a chain saw when a neighbor fells a tree or depression as developers extend yet another strip mall into the countryside. It has the power to change one's life."-P. D. Travis, Choice Magazine -- P. D. Travis Choice Magazine "In persuasively linking the modern digital technologies of imagined reality to their historical antecedents, Opie has produced an important book and a new framework for understanding the story, one that is all the more relevant the more virtual our reality becomes."-Gregory Summers, Annals of Iowa -- Gregory Summers Annals of Iowa "Opie's book will help us maintain genuine connectivity in the cyber era."-Brian Black, Technology and Culture -- Brian Black Technology and Culture "This book can usefully guide students to think about how Americans have continually reconstructed their sense of place as they searched for an often problematic authenticity." -David E. Nye, American Studies Journal -- David E. Nye American Studies Journal
Book Information
ISBN 9780803232785
Author John Opie
Format Paperback
Page Count 277
Imprint University of Nebraska Press
Publisher University of Nebraska Press