Fr. 236.00

Disaster in the Early Modern World - Examinations, Representations, Interventions

English · Hardback

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Description

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How did early modern societies think about disasters, such as earthquakes or floods? How did they represent disaster, and how did they intervene to mitigate its destructive effects? This collection showcases the breadth of new work on the period ca. 1300-1750.

Covering topics that range from new thinking about risk and securitisation to the protection of dikes from shipworm, and with a geography that extends from Europe to Spanish America, the volume places early modern disaster studies squarely at the intersection of intellectual, cultural and socio-economic history. This period witnessed fresh speculation on nature, the diffusion of disaster narratives and imagery and unprecedented attempts to control the physical world.

The book will be essential to specialists and students of environmental history and disaster, as well as general readers who seek to discover how pre-industrial societies addressed some of the same foundational issues we grapple with today.

List of contents

Introduction  Part 1: Examinations  1. Taming the Future?: From 'Natural' Hazards and 'Disasters' to a Securitisation Against 'Risks'  2. Power, Fortune and Scientia naturalis: A Humanist Reading of Disasters in Giannozzo Manetti's De terremotu  3. Thinking with the Flood: Animal Endangerment and the Moral Economy of Disaster  4. Flood, Fire, and Tears: Imagining Climate Apocalypse in Scheuchzer's De portione (1707/08)  5. Communicating Research on the Great Frost in the Republic of Letters: From Halle to London  Part 2: Representations  6. What is an Avalanche?: Death in the Snow from Antiquity to Early Modern Times  7. Disasters and Devotion: Sacred Images and Religious Practices in Spanish America (16th-18th Centuries)  8. Straightening the Arno: Artistic Representations of Water Management in Medici Ducal and Grand Ducal Florence  9. Responses to a Recurrent Disaster: Flood Writings in Rome, 1476-1598  Part 3: Interventions  10. Flood, War and Economy: Leonardo da Vinci and the Plan to Divert the Arno River  11. The Making of a Transnational Disaster Saint: Francisco Borja, Patron Saint of Earthquakes from the Andes to Europe  12. Dikes, Ships and Worms: Testing the Limits of Envirotechnical Transfer During the Dutch Shipworm Epidemic of the 1730s

About the author










Ovanes Akopyan is a Marie Sk¿odowska-Curie fellow at Ca' Foscari University of Venice.
David Rosenthal is a Research Fellow at the University of Exeter and co-director of Hidden Cities apps.


Summary

How did early modern societies think about disasters, such as earthquakes or floods? How did they represent disaster, and how did they intervene to mitigate its destructive effects? This collection showcases the breadth of new work on the period ca. 1300-1750.

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