1. Introduction.
2. The Place of Nature.
3. Reappraising Nature.
4. Environment as Catastrophe.
5. Crossing Biological Boundaries.
6. The Ecological Frontier.
7. The Environmental Revolution.
8. Inventing Tropicality.
9. Colonizing Nature.
Conclusion.
Guide to Further Reading.
Index.
The Problem of Nature covers a whole cycle of environmental history and its interpretation, from the Black Death in the fourteenth century, the first European voyages of discovery and the opening of the American frontier through to the imperialism of the nineteenth century and the example of India under colonial rule. David Arnold shows how both the natural environment and ideas about nature have changed radically over the last five centuries.
The author describes the profound influence that historical and social theory and the biological sciences have had upon each other. He shows how the outcomes of their interaction not only informed and shaped the European impact upon the world and on itself, but how crucial they are to American conceptions of the society and history of the United States. He provides provocative answers to the questions of what role the environment should have in the conceptualization of time and place; and of how far societies and their histories can be understood from the perspectives of natural and biological sciences.