ABSTRACT

This volume discusses gardens as designed landscapes of mediation between nature and culture, embodying different levels of human control over wilderness, defining specific rules for this confrontation and staging different forms of human dominance.

The contributing authors focus on ways of rethinking the garden and its role in contemporary society, using it as a crossover platform between nature, science and technology. Drawing upon their diverse fields of research, including History of Science and Technology, Environmental Studies, Gardens and Landscape Studies, Urban Studies, and Visual and Artistic Studies, the authors unveil various entanglements woven in the past between nature and culture, and probe the potential of alternative epistemologies to escape the predicament of fatalistic dystopias that often revolve around the Anthropocene debate.

This book will be of great interest to those studying environmental and landscape history, the history of science and technology, historical geography, and the environmental humanities.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Nature and gardens in the history of science and technology and in garden and landscape studies

part I|2 pages

Rethinking the garden

chapter 1|22 pages

Hygiene, education and art

Roberto Burle Marx’s 1930s modern gardens in Brazil

chapter 2|17 pages

Between the nuclear lab and the backyard

Artificially enhanced plant breeding and the British Atomic Gardening Movement

chapter 4|20 pages

Shaping colonial landscapes in the early twentieth century

Urban planning and health policies in Lourenço Marques

part II|2 pages

Gardening the Anthropocene

chapter 5|17 pages

From Pairidaeza to Planet Garden

The homo-gardinus against desertification

chapter 6|12 pages

From Homo faber to Homo hortensis

Gardening techniques in the Anthropocene

chapter 7|19 pages

The distant gardener

Remote sensing of the planetary potager

chapter 8|16 pages

Resistance in the garden

Nature and society in the Anthropocene

part III|2 pages

Staging the Anthropocene

chapter 9|19 pages

A new machine in the garden?

Staging technospheres in the Anthropocene

chapter 10|21 pages

The atom in the garden and the apocalyptic fungi

A tale on a global nuclearscape (with artworks and bird-songs)

chapter 11|15 pages

Inhabitants

Image politics in ongoing climate crisis

chapter 12|19 pages

Troubled gardens

Nature–technoculture binary and the search for a Safe Operating Space in Hayao Miyazaki’s Mononoke Hime