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WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us.BY WILLIAM CRONON
The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature by William Cronon (William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90) The time has come to rethink wilderness. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
WILLIAM CRONON
The Ghost Town in Question: Kennecott. located in midst of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, at the end of a 63-mile gravel road which was once a railroad. in 1900, prospectors discovered above Kennicott Glacier one of world’s richest lodes of copper ore: 70% pure. Stephen Birch, mining engineer, formed Alaskan Syndicate with$10 million of
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVE Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us.BY WILLIAM CRONON
The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature by William Cronon (William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90) The time has come to rethink wilderness. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
WILLIAM CRONON
The Ghost Town in Question: Kennecott. located in midst of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, at the end of a 63-mile gravel road which was once a railroad. in 1900, prospectors discovered above Kennicott Glacier one of world’s richest lodes of copper ore: 70% pure. Stephen Birch, mining engineer, formed Alaskan Syndicate with$10 million of
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVE Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collecting WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems.READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
WILLIAM CRONON
Lecture #9: The Machine in the Garden: Agricultural Revolutions Suggested Readings: Johann Heinrich von Thünen, Von Thünen's Isolated State (1826, translated 1966) David Potter, People of Plenty: Economic Abundance and the American Character (1954) H. J. Habakkuk, American and British Technology in the Nineteenth Century (1962) William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and theWILLIAM CRONON
Advice Against Despair: Caring For The Whole And For Ourselves: William Cronon Northland College Commencement, May 27, 2006.INTRODUCTION
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE 00:00. 00:00. Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume. Within the sacred space of the Forest Hill Cemetery, perhaps the most powerful ritual is the funeral. Although such services are generally short, much of a person’s life can be told through this ceremony. For instance, the solemn experience of a veteran receiving military CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
STONES - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Metamorphic Rock. Family Name: Waterhouse. Material: Marble, Limestone bust. Form: Pillar. Date: 19th C. Section: 29. Marble is a more common material for monuments and grave markers throughout the Forest Hill Cemetery. Many of these monuments have also been broken and show rounded edges and faded inscriptions from more than a century ofweathering.
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us.BY WILLIAM CRONON
The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature by William Cronon (William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90) The time has come to rethink wilderness. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Imagine being able to listen to Cesar Chavez talk about the struggle for migrant workers’ rights or learning about cotton picking during the Great Depression.Oral histories can be as engaging as a great conversation over a good cup of coffee. They allow you to learn about people, moments, experiences, and events that you may not have first-hand access to otherwise. WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems. ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVE Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.INTRODUCTION
First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Maps for Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin.VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us.BY WILLIAM CRONON
The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature by William Cronon (William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90) The time has come to rethink wilderness. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Imagine being able to listen to Cesar Chavez talk about the struggle for migrant workers’ rights or learning about cotton picking during the Great Depression.Oral histories can be as engaging as a great conversation over a good cup of coffee. They allow you to learn about people, moments, experiences, and events that you may not have first-hand access to otherwise. WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems. ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVE Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.INTRODUCTION
First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Maps for Forest Hill Cemetery in Madison, Wisconsin.VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991) Bancroft Prize for 1992. Chicago Tribune's Heartland Prize for best non-fiction work of 1991 WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems.READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.WILLIAM CRONON
Lecture #9: The Machine in the Garden: Agricultural Revolutions Suggested Readings: Johann Heinrich von Thünen, Von Thünen's Isolated State (1826, translated 1966) David Potter, People of Plenty: Economic Abundance and the American Character (1954) H. J. Habakkuk, American and British Technology in the Nineteenth Century (1962) William Cronon, Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and theWILLIAM CRONON
Lecture #1: Ghost Landscapes: Getting Started with Environmental History Suggested Readings: William Cronon, “Kennecott Journey: The Paths Out of Town,” in Cronon, ed., RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE This is a guide to the various commemorative rituals that are practiced within Forest Hill Cemetery. We encourage reflection on the meaning of such practices, and the values that are embodied within them at both the community and individual level. CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS This section is relevant for the few Catholic graves in Forest Hill cemetery and especially useful if you want to visit Resurrection cemetery, which is located across the street from Forest Hill.VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingBY WILLIAM CRONON
The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature by William Cronon (William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90) The time has come to rethink wilderness. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
WILLIAM CRONON
The Ghost Town in Question: Kennecott. located in midst of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, at the end of a 63-mile gravel road which was once a railroad. in 1900, prospectors discovered above Kennicott Glacier one of world’s richest lodes of copper ore: 70% pure. Stephen Birch, mining engineer, formed Alaskan Syndicate with$10 million of
READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents. A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVE Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingBY WILLIAM CRONON
The Trouble with Wilderness; or, Getting Back to the Wrong Nature by William Cronon (William Cronon, ed., Uncommon Ground: Rethinking the Human Place in Nature, New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1995, 69-90) The time has come to rethink wilderness. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
WILLIAM CRONON
The Ghost Town in Question: Kennecott. located in midst of Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, at the end of a 63-mile gravel road which was once a railroad. in 1900, prospectors discovered above Kennicott Glacier one of world’s richest lodes of copper ore: 70% pure. Stephen Birch, mining engineer, formed Alaskan Syndicate with$10 million of
READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents. A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVE Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991) Chicago Tribune's Heartland Prize for best non-fiction work of 1991. One of three nominees for the Pulitzer Prize in History, 1992. George Perkins Marsh Prize for 1992 for Best Book in Environmental History published in 1990 or 1991 given by AmericanSociety for
NOTE-TAKING
Throughout this note-taking section, we’ve drawn from Booth, Colomb, and Williams, whose book, The Craft of Research (2003), offers invaluable ideas for researching and writing papers.These authors say it best: “read first to understand fully.”READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems. ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
DRAFTING, REVISING, EDITING, WRITING Drafting, Revising, and Editing How to Get the Dead Dogs and Leaning Chocolate Cakes out of Your Paper Genya Erling Trish O’Kane. Introduction. You can think of writing like baking a chocolate cake except that you are going to bake three or four chocolate cakes. CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
LANDSCAPING
Landscaping. This is a guide to the landscape experience of Forest Hill Cemetery, via the historic plant communities and design traditions that have shaped this place. We encourage reflection on how ecological processes and human imagination facilitate encounters withthe sacred.
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVEWILLIAM CRONON ESSAYWILLIAM CRONON HISTORIANWILLIAM CRONON QUIZLET Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDESEE MORE ON FORESTHILL.WILLIAMCRONON.NET MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVEWILLIAM CRONON ESSAYWILLIAM CRONON HISTORIANWILLIAM CRONON QUIZLET Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDESEE MORE ON FORESTHILL.WILLIAMCRONON.NET MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991) Chicago Tribune's Heartland Prize for best non-fiction work of 1991. One of three nominees for the Pulitzer Prize in History, 1992. George Perkins Marsh Prize for 1992 for Best Book in Environmental History published in 1990 or 1991 given by AmericanSociety for
WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon Biography. William Cronon studies North American environmental history and the history of the American West.. Cronon's research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems.READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.ABOUT THIS SITE
WHY We Chose Forest Hill. This website was created in the spring semester of 2015 by students in the CHE Methods Seminar, Environmental Studies 922, an interdisciplinary methods course offered each spring by the Center for Culture, History, and Environnent (CHE) of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Nelson Institute for EnvironmentalStudies.
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVEWILLIAM CRONON ESSAYWILLIAM CRONON HISTORIANWILLIAM CRONON QUIZLET Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDESEE MORE ON FORESTHILL.WILLIAMCRONON.NET MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVEWILLIAM CRONON ESSAYWILLIAM CRONON HISTORIANWILLIAM CRONON QUIZLET Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDESEE MORE ON FORESTHILL.WILLIAMCRONON.NET MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991) Chicago Tribune's Heartland Prize for best non-fiction work of 1991. One of three nominees for the Pulitzer Prize in History, 1992. George Perkins Marsh Prize for 1992 for Best Book in Environmental History published in 1990 or 1991 given by AmericanSociety for
WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon Biography. William Cronon studies North American environmental history and the history of the American West.. Cronon's research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems.READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.ABOUT THIS SITE
WHY We Chose Forest Hill. This website was created in the spring semester of 2015 by students in the CHE Methods Seminar, Environmental Studies 922, an interdisciplinary methods course offered each spring by the Center for Culture, History, and Environnent (CHE) of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Nelson Institute for EnvironmentalStudies.
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVEWILLIAM CRONON ESSAYWILLIAM CRONON HISTORIANWILLIAM CRONON QUIZLET Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDESEE MORE ON FORESTHILL.WILLIAMCRONON.NET MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison.WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. INTERVIEWS - LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH There are thousands of oral histories that exist that could provide rich material for your research. If you're interested in learning about existing oral histories, you may want to check with your local library or historical society to ask about oral histories they mayhave.
A PLACE FOR STORIES: NATURE, HISTORY, AND NARRATIVEWILLIAM CRONON ESSAYWILLIAM CRONON HISTORIANWILLIAM CRONON QUIZLET Nature, History, and Narrative 1349 Thequestion is trickier thanitseems, for it transports us intothemuchcontested terrain between traditional social science and postmodernist critical theory. As an environmental historian who tries to blend the analytical traditionsofhistory with
INTRODUCTION
Introduction. First laid out in 1857-58, Forest Hill is an iconic example of a Romantic rural cemetery of the kind that became popular across the United States during the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Easily Madison’s largest and most beautiful cemetery, it serves as the final resting place for individuals and families whoplayed
RITUALS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDESEE MORE ON FORESTHILL.WILLIAMCRONON.NET MAPS - FOREST HILL CEMETERY: A GUIDE Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Land Use Map. For discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Zoning Map. Click here for PDF of Forest Hill Cemetery Zoning Map. For a discussion of this map, click here. Forest Hill Cemetery Reserved Sections. Click herefor
VISITING THE MOUNDS
Madison is a wonderful place for visiting effigy mounds. The mound groupings around Madison are classified as the Four Lakes mound system. The Four Lakes lies at the junction between mound systems, meaning that mounds of all shapes and types can be found in Madison. LEARNING HISTORICAL RESEARCH Paradoxical though it may sound, one of the most challenging things about doing historical research is that the past doesn't exist anymore. Unlike science, where one can set up a laboratory experiment or perform field investigations that describe the world as it exists right now, the past survives only as fragments that remain from a time that is no more. Studying history means collectingWILLIAM CRONON
Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991) Chicago Tribune's Heartland Prize for best non-fiction work of 1991. One of three nominees for the Pulitzer Prize in History, 1992. George Perkins Marsh Prize for 1992 for Best Book in Environmental History published in 1990 or 1991 given by AmericanSociety for
WILLIAM CRONON
William Cronon Biography. William Cronon studies North American environmental history and the history of the American West.. Cronon's research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our POSITIONING YOUR ARGUMENT By exploring other scholars’ work, you open up the possibility of discovering exciting, imaginative connections. Chances are good that a story you want to tell has corollaries in other periods of history and relates to other schools of thought, literary genres, scientific studies, or political fields. WHAT ARE THE DOCUMENTS? Let’s take a slightly different tack and assume that you have found some documents that seem directly relevant to your topic and research question.With all this early progress and good fortune, it may seem like your research is over. But much like what happens when you cannot come up with your ideal sources, assembling good evidence will only give rise to other research problems.READING LANDSCAPES
How to Read a Landscape. During Fall 2008, members of the History / Geography 932 "Topics in American Environmental History" graduate seminar at the University of Wisconsin-Madison embarked on the rather quixotic project of building an extensive set of web resources offering guidance to anyone interested in learning how to perform original research in environmental history no matter what their ASKING GOOD QUESTIONS A good research question defines the focus of your research project. Your research question helps readers to know the specific subject matter you will be addressing within the broad topic of environmentalhistory.
HOW LAWS GET CREATED How Laws Get Created Liese Dart Emma Schroeder. A basic overview of the branches of government and how these processes work can help you find government documents.ABOUT THIS SITE
WHY We Chose Forest Hill. This website was created in the spring semester of 2015 by students in the CHE Methods Seminar, Environmental Studies 922, an interdisciplinary methods course offered each spring by the Center for Culture, History, and Environnent (CHE) of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Nelson Institute for EnvironmentalStudies.
CATHOLIC AND LUTHERAN TRADITIONS Two answers come to mind. First, a cemetery might serve a peaceful place of rest until the day of final resurrection, and second, it is important as a place of remembrance, a space of reverence of the memory of loved ones. In the Christian tradition, salvation is possible only through Jesus. In the beginning of time, according toChristianity
WILLIAM CRONON
FREDERICK JACKSON TURNER AND VILAS RESEARCH PROFESSOR OF HISTORY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN–MADISON CURTIS PRAIRIE AT THE UW ARBORETUMToggle navigation
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ABOUT WILLIAM CRONON William Cronon studies American environmental history and the history of the American West. His research seeks to understand the history of human interactions with the natural world: how we depend on the ecosystems around us to sustain our material lives, how we modify the landscapes in which we live and work, and how our ideas of nature shape our relationships with the world around us.FAVORITE QUOTATIONS
“This is a history. But there is only one history. It began with the creation of man and will come to an end when the last human consciousness is extinguished. All other beginnings and endings are arbitrary conventions--makeshifts parading as self-sufficient entireties, diffusing petty comfort or petty despair. The cumbrous shears of the historian cut out a few figures and brief passage of time from that enormous tapestry. Above and below the laceration, to the right and left of it, the severed threads protest against the injustice, against the imposture. It is only in appearance that time is a river. It is rather a vast landscape and it is the eye of the beholder that moves. Look about you in all directions -- rise higher, rise higher! -- and see hills beyond hills, plains and rivers.” —Thornton Wilder, _The Eighth Day_ More favorite quotationsCURRENT HIGHLIGHTS
THE MAKING OF THE AMERICAN LANDSCAPE This course, GEOGRAPHY / HISTORY / ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 469, explores how the American landscape has evolved through both natural and humantransformations.
Course website
AMERICAN ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY I have offered my survey course on American Environmental History for over 20 years. It is currently listed as HISTORY / GEOGRAPHY / ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES 460.Course website
THE CENTER FOR CULTURE, HISTORY, AND ENVIRONMENT CHE is a group of University of Wisconsin-Madison faculty and graduate students who are broadly interested in the changing relationships of humans and the natural world in the broad sweep of history.Center website
AHA PRESIDENTIAL WRITINGS AND COLUMNS Material from Cronon's AMERICAN HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION presidential year, including the text, video, and audio of his presidential address on "Storytelling," Richard White's bio, and Cronon's complete presidential columns on "The Public Practice of History in and for aDigital Age."
Go to page
FOREST HILL CEMETERY The CHE Methods Seminar built a cool new web-based field guide to Forest Hill Cemetery, a canonical 19th-century Romantic landscape inMadison.
Project site
CONVERSATIONS WITH HISTORY INTERVIEW In April 2013, Cronon did an hour-long video interview with Harry Kreisler of UC-Berkeley for the "Conversations with History" series.Watch the video
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