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E-raamat: Creating Wilderness: A Transnational History of the Swiss National Park

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The Swiss National Park was the first national park in Europe, but was much different in origin than American parks like Yellowstone. From the beginning the park was designed as a collaboration between the state and scientific research, which has influenced the course of national parks worldwide. Patrick Kupper uses the Swiss National Park as a grounding point to explore national parks as a global phenomenon. Covering topics such as the development of the Swiss Commission for Nature Protection and the philosophy of “total protection,” the scope of this book ranges from local to global to more fully understand the history of national parks. This is the first time that the history of the Swiss National Park has been told in its entirety. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Arvustused

Well tied into the literature of national park studies worldwide, this exquisite book chronicles the unique Swiss experience in creating and managing a national park in which wilderness was nonexistent Highly recommended. · Choice





Kupper effectively links the specific case of Switzerland with globalization and Westernization, international conservation paradigms, the social construction of wilderness, and an evolving understanding of ecosystem dynamics and the science of conservation. · Mountain Research and Development





Readers interested in early twentieth-century Swiss conservation (especially its international connections), the bureaucracy of setting up a new national park (particularly one based on a new, science-focused national park idea), and theoretical ideas about the constructed nature of national parks and wilderness will find reward in this work. · The Public Historian





Creating Wilderness is a detailed and thought-provoking historical analysis of the origins and development of the Swiss National Park. · Mountain Research and Development





National parks have long been a favoured  subject for environmental histories, as microcosms where the interaction of nature, science, politics and leisure can be observed. By linking the Swiss National Park with developments elsewhere in the world, Kupper has delivered an important contribution to this literatureKupper has provided a comprehensive  account of the development of the Swiss National Park as well as a fascinating reinterpretation of the national park as a transnational phenomenon  in the twentieth century. · German History





This is environmental history of the first order, ranging widely across geographical scales and historical periods to trace the changing discourses and manifestations of the national park model. Kupper convincingly proves that the Swiss national parks, while inspired by the global movement sparked by the creation of the American national parks in the late 19th century, quickly established themselves as a countermodel to the American national parks, and how the Swiss model reflected specifically European concerns. · Andrew Denning, Western Washington University





Patrick Kuppers book is an important contribution to the history of national parks [ by putting] the creation of a Swiss national park into an explicitly transnational context.  He understands the Swiss national park not as a mere copy of an American model but in a more nuanced way that blends different international examples with the Swiss historical context Kuppers work is squarely in the tradition of Benedict Andersons Imagined Communities Indeed, he nicely debunks the idea that the US invented the national park idea.  One might say that Kupper does for national parks what Anderson did for nationalism itself. · Andrew Isenberg, Temple University

List of Figures
vi
Acknowledgments viii
List of Abbreviations
ix
Introduction 1(14)
Chapter 1 Global Parks: National Parks, Globalization, and Western Modernism
15(23)
Chapter 2 National Natures: The Swiss National Park and the Conservationist Internationale
38(32)
Chapter 3 Local Landscapes: Political Spaces, Institutional Arrangements, and Subjective Attitudes
70(37)
Chapter 4 Total Protection: Philosophy and Practice of Freely Developing Nature
107(30)
Chapter 5 Ecological Field Laboratory: The Park as a Scientific Experiment
137(38)
Chapter 6 Wilderness Limits: Natural Dynamics and Social Equilibrium
175(44)
Conclusion 219(7)
Bibliography 226(29)
Index 255
Patrick Kupper is Professor of Economic and Social History at the University of Innsbruck. He is the co-editor of Civilizing Nature: National Parks in Global Historical Perspective (Berghahn, 2012).