A New Science for a Post-Frontier World

Autores/as

  • Donald Worster University of Kansas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32991/2237-2717.2020v10i1.p117-124

Palabras clave:

Environmental History, Frontier Agriculture, Wes Jackson, Land Institute

Resumen

The driving force behind the North American frontier were waves of economic migrants from Europe and their offspring, competing against the indigenous people and eventually replacing them. But those waves were backed up by the power of the American and Canadian nation states, with their well-armed military, their well funded railroads, and other technology and capital. Science too was initially on the side of the invaders. But after World War One that frontier began to run out of free, abundant land. Then began what I will call a “post-frontier” science, especially ecological in content, that represented a very different attitude toward the white man’s conquest. Scientists like Frederick Clements, John C. Weaver, Paul Sears, and Stan Rowe, all natives to the Great Plains, laid the foundations for what is now a powerful critique of frontier agriculture. This article aims to summarize that critique briefly but focus mainly on the more recent work of Wes Jackson, founder and longtime president of the Land Institute. He has strongly criticized the frontier ethos for its the lack of understanding of the native ecology of the grasslands. In its place he has offered a vision of “perennial polyculture,” using nature as a model for agriculture in an era of limits. That model has not only been making a growing impact on American thinking but has now spread to other continents. Will the end of this frontier cycle and scientific reappraisal turn out to be what Jackson calls a “new agriculture,” one based on learning from the past and one that can change farming all over the world?

Citas

Clements, Frederic E. Plant Succession; an Analysis of the Development of Vegetation. Washington: Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1916.
———. The Development and Structure of Vegetation. Lincon, Nebraska: The Woodruff-Collins Printing Company, 1904.
Creighton, Donald Grant. The Empire of the St. Lawrence: A Study in Commerce and Politics. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2002.
Dutra e Silva, Sandro. No Oeste a Terra e o Céu: A Expansão Da Fronteira Agrícola No Brasil Central. Rio de Janeiro: Mauad X, 2017.
Jackson, Wes. Nature as Measure: The Selected Essays of Wes Jackson. Berkeley, Califórnia: Counterpoint Press, 2011.
———. New Roots for Agriculture. Lincon, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 1985.
Sears, Paul Bigelow. Deserts on the March. 4th ed. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1980.
Turner, Frederick Jackson. The Significance of the Frontier in American History. Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1894.
Worster, Donald. Dust Bowl: The Southern Plains in the 1930s. New York: Oxford University Press, 1979.
———. Nature’s Economy: A History of Ecological Ideas. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994.

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Publicado

2020-05-06

Cómo citar

Worster, D. (2020). A New Science for a Post-Frontier World. Historia Ambiental Latinoamericana Y Caribeña (HALAC) Revista De La Solcha, 10(1), 117–124. https://doi.org/10.32991/2237-2717.2020v10i1.p117-124

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