TY - JOUR
T1 - Addressing multiple perspectives in studying environmental changes in forest landscapes during the modernization period (18th–19th centuries)
AU - Związek, Tomasz
AU - Łuców, Dominika
AU - Popek, Joachim
AU - Klisz, Marcin
AU - Obremska, Milena
AU - Sobechowicz, Łukasz
AU - Solon, Jerzy
AU - Słowiński, Michał
AU - Przybylski, Paweł
AU - Tyburski, Łukasz
AU - Zin, Ewa
AU - Jastrzębowski, Szymon
AU - Płaczkowska, Eliza
AU - Pilch, Kamil
AU - Szewczyk, Krzysztof
AU - Konczal, Agata
AU - Rutkowski, Paweł
AU - Główka, Dariusz
AU - Swoboda, Paweł
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Combining different diverse data on human and environmental history during the Anthropocene is an extremely challenging task, particularly, if one wants to compare written or cartographic data with a whole range of environmental data recorded for more than the past 200–300 years. In this article, our objective was to demonstrate that one of the keys to facilitating syntheses for the study of forest landscape dynamics was to conduct a thorough investigation into the historical phenomena of modernization. We believe that a comprehensive understanding of the advancements in post-enlightenment thought and contextualizing them within the evolution of the state apparatus during the 18th and 19th centuries will empower us to formulate new research questions and broaden our understanding of the mutual relations between nature and humans in the past.
AB - Combining different diverse data on human and environmental history during the Anthropocene is an extremely challenging task, particularly, if one wants to compare written or cartographic data with a whole range of environmental data recorded for more than the past 200–300 years. In this article, our objective was to demonstrate that one of the keys to facilitating syntheses for the study of forest landscape dynamics was to conduct a thorough investigation into the historical phenomena of modernization. We believe that a comprehensive understanding of the advancements in post-enlightenment thought and contextualizing them within the evolution of the state apparatus during the 18th and 19th centuries will empower us to formulate new research questions and broaden our understanding of the mutual relations between nature and humans in the past.
U2 - 10.1177/20530196231205485
DO - 10.1177/20530196231205485
M3 - Article
SN - 2053-0196
VL - 11
SP - 302
EP - 328
JO - The Anthropocene Review
JF - The Anthropocene Review
IS - 2
ER -