Críticas:
[A] brilliantly successful environmental biography . . . Historians have tended to blame the farmers themselves for the soil depletion that contributed so heavily to the poverty ofthe rural South, but Nelson's study offers a convincing analysis of the overwhelming difficulties facing those who attempted soil conservation. --Randolph B. Campbell "Journal of American History " Nelson's effort is more than the 'environmental biography' its subtitle suggests. It is a model for the integration of environmental considerations into historical analysis. In the best tradition of inductive reasoning, he draws out the implications of the experience of one particular family in one particular place to develop a broader consideration of the tensions and conflicts of southern agriculture. --John P. McCarthy "Journal of the Early Republic " Sets a high bar for future publications [in its series] . . . Meticulously researched and persuasively argued. --Connie L. Lester "Journal of Southern History " Key to understanding the southern conservation movement as it follows its owners' agricultural pursuits and environmental assessments. --Library Bookwatch There are many things to admire in Nelson's writing: excellent description, imaginative 'sight seeing, ' vivid characterizations, and a flowing story. --Terri Sharrer "American Historical Review " Innovative . . . Nelson has effectively utilized the family papers and consulted an extensive array of secondary sources to produce a solid study . . . Rich and informative . . . Pharsalia is a rich addition to the exciting and rapidly growing field of southern environmental history. --Robert B. Outland III "North Carolina Historical Review " Lynn Nelson gets beneath the literature of nineteenth-century 'agricultural improvement' to the hard realities encountered by a Virginia planter who tried it. William Massie plowed deep, sowed clover, improved his seeds and breeds, and achieved some success by dogged good management. But in the end, Pharsalia foundered on the contradictions between high farming and ecological pushback from pests and weeds, crop markets glutted by cheap frontier production, resistance from black slaves and white neighbors, and the luxurious lifestyle expectations of Massie's children. Variations of this same dilemma haunt the dreams of soil conservation and sustainable farming in America to this day. Agricultural history needs more ecologically grounded studies like this one. --Brian Donahue "author of The Great Meadow: Farmers and the Land in Colonial Concord " Lynn Nelson has given us a wonderful case study of southern agricultural practices during the nineteenth century. His 'biography' of Pharsalia, a plantation in upland Virginia, is in every sense a life story not only of planters and slaves but also of the crops, weeds, livestock, and other organisms that inhabited the land for nearly a hundred years. Exhaustively researched and quietly provocative, this important book should find a wide audience among scholars interested in the South, the environment, agriculture, or antebellum slavery. --Timothy Silver "author of A New Face on the Countryside: Indians, Colonists, and Slaves in South Atlantic Forests, 1500-1900 "
Reseña del editor:
Pharsalia, a plantation located in piedmont Virginia at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains, is one of the best-documented sites of its kind. Drawing on the exceptionally rich trove of papers left behind by the Massie family, Pharsalia's owners, this case study demonstrates how white southern planters paradoxically relied on capitalistic methods even as they pursued an ideal of agrarian independence. Lynn A. Nelson also shows how the contradictions between these ends and means would later manifest themselves in the southern conservation movement.
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