MIT Seminar on Environmental and Agricultural History

‘Fluvio-centric currents of river history: from the Mersey to the Po’
Peter Coates, University of Bristol
In many environmental histories, rivers feature primarily as victims of human 
abuse. This talk shifts the perspective, focusing on what rivers do to us 
rather than what we do to them. Rivers illustrate the limits of human authority 
as well as our transformative abilities, and their capacity to shape and 
inspire us is as strong as our ability to harness and pollute them. With 
reference to six bodies of water - the Danube, the Spree in eastern Germany, 
Italy’s Po, the Mersey in northwest England, the Yukon and the Los Angeles 
River – Coates will examine the possibilities of a fluvio-centric version of 
liquid history. Rather than a view from the bridge, he considers the view from 
under the bridge.
 Friday, May 10, 2013
2:30 to 4:30 pm
Building E51 Room 095
Corner of Wadsworth and Amherst Streets, Cambridge

Sponsored by MIT's History Faculty and the Program in Science, Technology and 
Society. For more information or to be put on the mailing list contact 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.


_______________________________________________
Sci-tech-public mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/sci-tech-public

Reply via email to