Exercise #2: Family Environmental History
Instructions
For Exercise #2, you will bring the environmental concepts home by looking at your own and your family environmental history.
Our lives and present environments are products of history. Our parents and grandparents grew up in very different environments from those of today. In our study of environmental history, it is helpful to think about our families’ past environments and their meaning for us today.
- Write an informal essay, between 700 and 1100 words, reflecting on your personal environmental history going back to your grandparents, parents, and your own generation. See the Exercise 2 Samples for a guide to this exercise.
- In formulating your response, consider the environments in which they and you have lived. Where were they located? What natural resources sustained your families and their communities? To what extent were those environments “natural” or human-made, native, or exotic (that is, transformed by European or other non-native species)? How have your families helped to transform their environments? Does your own ethnic and class heritage or gender play a role in the way you and your family have related to and valued the environment? How did the relationships your grandparents and parents had with their environments differ from the ones you have had in the past and wish to have in the future?
- Post your response by clicking ‘Add Submission’ below.
- Please note, you should write and edit your submission in a separate file then copy and paste it into the submission box. Once submitted to the HIST 3991 trubox site, you will not be able to edit your post.
Are you a student of HIST 3991? Click here to add a submission to this assignment.
Submissions
Exercise #2: My Family Environmental History
December 30, 2023 By: Jacob
My family’s environmental history in Perth, Ontario, spans across three generations each having an influence on my relationship with nature. The landscape where I lived was a country side with open fields and my neighbours were nowhere to be seen. This experience has had a significant influence on my love of nature, living off the land, and being outside. My grandparents’ story is connected to survival with the land. Perth’s countryside was a place where the natural resources of the land were rich and diverse. Firewood was collected from various trees such as maple, birch, poplar, and elm trees and…
MacLeod Family History
December 22, 2023 By: Rodmac
HIST 3991 MacLeod Clan in Canada Exercise 2 – Family Environmental History Rod MacLeod T00449542 December 2023 The MacLeod clan came to Canada in the late 1700s when the English determined that the Scottish tenant farmer population was interfering with the raising of sheep, and shipped hundreds of families off to the colonies. This is known as the Highland clearances and is a defining moment for both Scottish and Canadian history. The clan settled near Pictou, Nova Scotia and many worked in the local coal mines. A fire at Acadia Mines in 1873 resulted in the death of 60…
MacLeod Family History
December 20, 2023 By: Rodmac
HIST 3991 MacLeod Clan in Canada Exercise 2 – Family Environmental History Rod MacLeod T00449542 December 2023 The MacLeod clan came to Canada in the late 1700s when the English determined that the Scottish tenant farmer population was interfering with the raising of sheep, and shipped hundreds of families off to the colonies. This is known as the Highland clearances and is a defining moment for both Scottish and Canadian history. The clan settled near Pictou, Nova Scotia and many worked in the local coal mines. A fire at Acadia Mines in 1873 resulted in the death of 60…
Four Reading notes
December 20, 2023 By: Rodmac
Environmental History 3991 Unit 2 Assessment 2 Reading notes Rod MacLeod T00449542 December 2023 Introduction. Four of the Reading Notes out of the eight included in the first Unit of the course have been chosen as they relate to many of the issues currently taking place in the authors geographical area. Citation Worster, Donald. “Transformations of the Earth: Toward an Agroecological Perspective in History.” The Journal of American History 76, no. 4 (1990): 1087–1106. https://doi.org/10.2307/2936586. Thesis The older history was naïve in the sense that it tended to separate nature and humans, and while there are…
Environmental History of Rod in Okanagan-Boundary
December 11, 2023 By: rodmac
HIST 3991 MacLeod Clan in Canada Exercise 2 – Family Environmental History Rod MacLeod T00449542 December 2023 The MacLeod clan came to Canada in the late 1700s when the English determined that the Scottish tenant farmer population was interfering with the raising of sheep, and shipped hundreds of families off to the colonies. This is known as the Highland clearances and is a defining moment for both Scottish and Canadian history. The clan settled near Pictou, Nova Scotia and many worked in the local coal mines. A fire at Acadia Mines in 1873 resulted in the death of 60…