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What Nature Suffers to Groe: Life, Labor, and Landscape on the Georgia Coast, 1680-1920 Revised Edition
Contributor(s): Stewart, Mart A. (Author)
ISBN: 0820324590     ISBN-13: 9780820324593
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
OUR PRICE:   $33.20  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: December 2002
Qty:
Annotation: "What Nature Suffers to Groe" focuses on a particular place and time to explore how environment and human culture transform each other. Mart A. Stewart shows how each successive community on the Georgia coast -- including its natives, settlers, slaves, sharecroppers, lumbermen, and developers -- forged unique relationships with the environment, which in turn created unique landscapes.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Science | Environmental Science (see Also Chemistry - Environmental)
- Social Science | Human Geography
Dewey: 304.209
LCCN: 2003267995
Series: Wormsloe Foundation Publication
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 7.7" W x 9.26" (1.22 lbs) 392 pages
Themes:
- Geographic Orientation - Georgia
- Cultural Region - Southeast U.S.
- Cultural Region - South
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

"What Nature Suffers to Groe" explores the mutually transforming relationship between environment and human culture on the Georgia coastal plain between 1680 and 1920. Each of the successive communities on the coast--the philanthropic and imperialistic experiment of the Georgia Trustees, the plantation culture of rice and sea island cotton planters and their slaves, and the postbellum society of wage-earning freedmen, lumbermen, vacationing industrialists, truck farmers, river engineers, and New South promoters--developed unique relationships with the environment, which in turn created unique landscapes.

The core landscape of this long history was the plantation landscape, which persisted long after its economic foundation had begun to erode. The heart of this study examines the connection between power relations and different perceptions and uses of the environment by masters and slaves on lowcountry plantations--and how these differing habits of land use created different but interlocking landscapes.

Nature also has agency in this story; some landscapes worked and some did not. Mart A. Stewart argues that the creation of both individual and collective livelihoods was the consequence not only of economic and social interactions but also of changing environmental ones, and that even the best adaptations required constant negotiation between culture and nature. In response to a question of perennial interest to historians of the South, Stewart also argues that a "sense of place" grew out of these negotiations and that, at least on the coastal plain, the "South" as a place changed in meaning several times.