Giacomelli, Joseph Nereo (Author)
Scholars of American history have sometimes characterised late nineteenth-century theories about anthropogenic climate change as testaments to Manifest Destiny hubris and runaway boosterism. But many Gilded-Age climate theorists acknowledged both the uncertainty of their scientific claims and their ambivalence toward capitalist development and its influence on climates and landscapes. Gustavus Hinrichs, George Curtis, and other climate thinkers invoked uncertainty for a wide range of reasons. Sometimes they voiced frustration at their inability to grasp the mysterious agencies shaping climatic change. At other times, they embraced uncertainty as a key component of modern science. This article examines the role of scientific and cultural uncertainty in late nineteenth-century debates about climate and environment. The writings produced over the course of these debates reveal a series of tensions and dialectics at the core of nineteenth-century culture: tensions between visions of environmental utopia and fears of degradation and catastrophe, between positivist science and insecurity about the illusory nature of scientific knowledge, between the confident rhetoric of Manifest Destiny and a persistent ambivalence about the tenability of extractive capitalism.
...More
Thesis
Joseph Nereo Giacomelli;
(2017)
Uncertain Climes: Debating Climate Change in Gilded-Age America
Thesis
Michael Verderame;
(2017)
Science, Politics, and Soul-Making: The Romantic Encounter with Climate Change
Article
R. Ashton Macfarlane;
(2021)
Wild Laboratories of Climate Change: Plants, Phenology, and Global Warming, 1955–1980
Thesis
Gary Brooten;
(2016)
The Very Useful Notion: A Rhetorical History of the Idea of Human-Made Climate Change, 1950-2000
Article
James Lawrence Powell;
(2015)
Climate Scientists Virtually Unanimous Anthropogenic Global Warming Is True
Book
Peter Knight;
(2016)
Reading the Market: Genres of Financial Capitalism in Gilded Age America
Thesis
Brian Allen Gazaille;
(2016)
Wasteful Words: Visions and Failures of Literary Efficiency in American Fiction, 1885-1910
Article
Daniel Steel;
(2016)
Climate Change and Second-Order Uncertainty: Defending a Generalized, Normative, and Structural Argument from Inductive Risk
Book
Lukas Rieppel;
(2019)
Assembling the Dinosaur: Fossil Hunters, Tycoons, and the Making of a Spectacle
Book
Diarmid A. Finnegan;
(2021)
The Voice of Science: British Scientists on the Lecture Circuit in Gilded Age America
Article
Ryan O'Loughlin;
(2020)
Seepage, objectivity, and climate science
Article
Carin Graminius;
(2022)
Research Communication on Climate Change through Open Letters: Uniting Cognition, Affect and Action by Affective Alignments
Article
Sedona Chinn;
P. Sol Hart;
Stuart Soroka;
(2020)
Politicization and Polarization in Climate Change News Content, 1985-2017
Article
Rose, Anne C.;
(2011)
The Invention of Uncertainty in American Psychology: Intellectual Conflict and Rhetorical Resolution, 1890--1930
Book
Jamie L. Pietruska;
(2017)
Looking Forward: Prediction and Uncertainty in Modern America
Thesis
Hyon Ju Lee;
(2016)
Dr. John Jeffries (1745-1819) and the Uncertain Practices of Smallpox Medicine
Thesis
Charles Robinson;
(2017)
From Jeu D'Esprit to Exact Science: Speculation, Science, and Literary Expression in the US, 1870-1895
Article
Pietruska, Jamie L.;
(2011)
US Weather Bureau Chief Willis Moore and the Reimagination of Uncertainty in Long-Range Forecasting
Article
Lukas Rieppel;
(2015)
Prospecting for Dinosaurs on the Mining Frontier: The Value of Information in America’s Gilded Age
Article
Marvel, Kevin B.;
(2007)
The Journals of the American Astronomical Society
Be the first to comment!