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  • Published: 5 September 2024
  • ISBN: 9781802066593
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00
Categories:

The Burning Earth

An Environmental History of the Last 500 Years





A brilliant, paradigm-shifting global survey of how human history has reshaped the planet, and vice versa

Ever since innovations in agriculture vastly expanded production of the staples of food energy, our remarkable achievements in reshaping nature have brought about an overwhelming expansion in the life chances of billions of people. Yet every technological innovation has also empowered humans to exploit each other and the planet with devastating brutality, twinning the stories of environment and of Empire, genocide and eco-cide, as with Spanish silver mining in Peru and British gold mining in South Africa.

After the age of empire, new nations raced to make up lost ground, expanding human freedom at devastating ecological cost. Amrith’s environmental lens provides an essential new way of understanding war: as a massive reshaping of the earth through the global mobilization of natural resources, those resources including humans themselves. He also makes clear that migration is often a consequence of environmental harm.

Reinterpreting a history previously seen from a Euro-and-anthropocentric viewpoint, Amrith relates in brilliant prose, and on the largest canvas, a magisterial, mind-altering epic - vibrant with stories, characters, vivid images and rich archival resources.

  • Published: 5 September 2024
  • ISBN: 9781802066593
  • Imprint: Penguin Audio
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $28.00
Categories:

Also by Sunil Amrith

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Praise for The Burning Earth

The Burning Earth, which is nothing short of a history of the world, is as beautiful as it is indispensable, as breathtaking as it is devastating. It answers questions most of us have been too daft even to ask. It will set you on fire

Jill Lepore, author of These Truths: A History of the United States

The Burning Earth is a marvelously erudite and wide-ranging account of the steadily accelerating ecological transformation of the planet since the twelfth century. An indispensable contribution to both environmental and global history

Amitav Ghosh, author of The Great Derangement

A devastating panorama of human folly, a poetic meditation on how the search for freedom from nature undermined the very conditions for life on earth. Beautifully written, Sunil Amrith’s global and long-term view is crucial to understanding the environmental predicaments we are in, and, perhaps, to restore a distraught world. A must read for anyone concerned with the state of the planet

Sven Beckert, author of Empire of Cotton

A wrenching, clear-eyed reckoning with humanity’s extractive relationship to the natural world that plants seeds of insight on how we can shift to an ethos of regeneration and repair. Every page challenges us to conceive the future we want for the planet...and ourselves

Kate Orff, author of Toward an Urban Ecology

Memorable and mesmerizing. Sunil Amrith has gifted us a page-turner of a book, written with passionate lucidity. Historically deep and geographically generous, The Burning Earth dramatizes human freedom’s profound dependence on the health and integrity of our environments. Amrith’s capacious insights and his worldly perspective make this a standout title for anyone interested in the long arc of environmental justice

Rob Nixon, author of Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor

Ranging from the Mongol expansion to contemporary climate change, Amrith has given us the most readable global environmental history yet. With an eye for the telling detail combined with a sense of the big picture, this book brings environmental perspectives together with such major world historical themes as empire, freedom and energy. A towering achievement and a joy to read

J.R. McNeill

[A] magisterial historical review [....] Amrith writes from an environmental history perspective, and with an impassioned sense of social justice, about a wide range of subjects, including agriculture, assassination, colonialization, disease, freedom, hunger, politics, pollution, slavery, urbanization, and war

Lawrence D. Meinert, Science

[The Burning Earth] is an environmentally focused chronicle of the eras of colonization and industrialization that probes the dual natures of war and resource extraction, ecological degradation and human mass migration, and technological improvement and planetary devastation

Publisher's Weekly

A far-reaching survey of the central role played by human needs and desires in the destruction of Earth

Kirkus Reviews

An epic exploration of human innovation and destruction [which] examines how the poor and powerless have fought back — time and again — against those seeking to profit from the planet’s natural resources

Josie Glausiusz, Nature

Both dizzying and deracinating, but also, even in its grimness, quite thrilling… What sets Amrith’s history apart is that he gives himself no fixed place to stand. He refuses to occupy a Eurocentric viewpoint, or any other developing instead a planetary awareness… Amrith’s panopticon-like vision is one we need to adopt as we must assume responsibility for the health of the planet… [his] reading is astonishing

Kathleen Jamie, New Statesman

A must-read history of our environmental crisis... [Amrith is an] engaging guide, with a lyrical style and a talent for storytelling... It is beautifully and clearly written, well-researched and finds new perspectives on much-discussed issues. Strongly recommended

Michael Marshall, New Scientist

[An] expansive book... Amrith recognizes the inseparability of environmental distress and political, economic, and social factors

The New York Times

Sunil Amrith’s The Burning Earth bristles with indignation... The history that Amrith covers is uncompromising, and he places the sins of environmental change on the insatiable greed of Europeans... [Amrith] is a scholar who writes with conviction

Peter Frankopan, The Spectator

This bleak, stunningly written book shows that the other side of the coin called progress is destruction. Amrith writes like the finest novelist, and his grasp of a mind-boggling expanse of material is deeply impressive

Neel Mukherjee, New Statesman

Written with passion and insight, [The Burning Earth] is a highly readable grand narrative illustrated by vignettes from across the globe.

David Reynolds, New Statesman

This year hasn’t been a great one for the environment, so a book about the long history of environmental damage may be a hard sell. However, this isn’t just a litany of woe. It unpicks the ways environmental harms have been driven by social systems and individual mentalities. In doing so, it points the way to a better society: one that no longer wages war on nature

Michael Marshall, New Scientist

[A] thorough and accessible survey… The Burning Earth is a welcome complement to important historical critiques of social injustice and inequality by authors like Howard Zinn and Eduardo Galeano

Ramin Skibba, Undark

Devastating and essential… In Amrith’s telling, human and environmental consequences are inseparable

Priscilla Long, American Scholar

As a historian, Sunil Amrith provides readers with a narrative that spans continents and centuries, calling out exploiters with compassion for the exploited. And if all history is environmental history, we all are authors of this next critical chapter

John Yunker, EcoLit Books

[A] magisterial historical review… Amrith writes from an environmental history perspective, and with an impassioned sense of social justice, about a wide range of subjects, including agriculture, assassination, colonialization, disease, freedom, hunger, politics, pollution, slavery, urbanization, and war

Lawrence D. Melnert, Science

Beautifully written… Sunil Amrith’s The Burning Earth takes us on a gloomy and bleak tour of how, in the name of progress, Western empires made a mess of everything

Michael Ledger-Lomas, Jacobin

The Burning Earth is a global history of the human destruction of the Earth in the pursuit of profit, as well as a sweeping account of how major technological advances have both improved and decimated human life. It’s a richly detailed story that tries to explain how we got to where we are today, so imperiled by the impacts of climate change, while also offering the possibility of new ways of flourishing on the planet

Yale News

In this expansive book, a historian places the earth’s ecological plight in the context of human exploitation

The New Yorker
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