Description

Book Synopsis
It shows how the industry's massive pollution loads significantly disrupted local environments and communities, leading to a long struggle to regulate and control that pollution.

Trade Review
This excellent book contributes most robustly to economic and environmental history, but it will be read profitably by scholars interested in political change, regulatory regimes, and race and labor...[an] insightful analysis of the paper industry's important role in the twentieth-century South. The trees slain for this book sacrificed their well-engineered lives for a good cause. American Historical Review Boyd provides a comprehensive and scholarly analysis of a vital industry in an era of substantive regional change. Choice ... Tremendous value as a legal history situated within broader political, historical, economic, and social context. North Carolina Historical Review Slain Wood is an important contribution to promoting understanding of the transformations borne by the Southern regional landscape in the twentieth century. The work is carefully researched and critically related, with a distinctive emphasis on the legal framework guiding transformation of Southern papermaking. AAG Review of Books William Boyd bring such analysis to the American South in a significant contribution to both southern and environmental history... this book is a welcome cross-disciplinary bridge between economic, legal, and environmental history that successfully explains the fundamental historical importance of this understudied industry H-Net Reviews This is a magisterial study of a relatively poorly understood world. To tell it well, Boyd takes seriously the many historiographical layers of the story, using business, technological, labor, legal, and environmental history approaches. The synthesis of these overlapping tales is a huge achievement and his beautiful writing make the book a powerful read. It could well stand as a model for future industrial-environmental historians. Journal of Southern History Overall, Boyd illustrates the double-edged sword that is economic development; its jobs and prosperity often inflict a devastating impact on the non-human and human environments. Boyd makes plain that "the smell of prosperity" is an odor whose costs should be weighed more carefully than Governor Wallace's glib analysis suggests. Environmental History

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Industrializing the Southern Forest
2. Logging the Mills
3. Making Paper
4. Appropriating the Environment
5. New South, New Nature
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index

The Slain Wood

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    £42.75

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    RRP £47.50 – you save £4.75 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 15 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by William Boyd

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      View other formats and editions of The Slain Wood by William Boyd

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 31/12/2015
      ISBN13: 9781421418780, 978-1421418780
      ISBN10: 1421418789

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      It shows how the industry's massive pollution loads significantly disrupted local environments and communities, leading to a long struggle to regulate and control that pollution.

      Trade Review
      This excellent book contributes most robustly to economic and environmental history, but it will be read profitably by scholars interested in political change, regulatory regimes, and race and labor...[an] insightful analysis of the paper industry's important role in the twentieth-century South. The trees slain for this book sacrificed their well-engineered lives for a good cause. American Historical Review Boyd provides a comprehensive and scholarly analysis of a vital industry in an era of substantive regional change. Choice ... Tremendous value as a legal history situated within broader political, historical, economic, and social context. North Carolina Historical Review Slain Wood is an important contribution to promoting understanding of the transformations borne by the Southern regional landscape in the twentieth century. The work is carefully researched and critically related, with a distinctive emphasis on the legal framework guiding transformation of Southern papermaking. AAG Review of Books William Boyd bring such analysis to the American South in a significant contribution to both southern and environmental history... this book is a welcome cross-disciplinary bridge between economic, legal, and environmental history that successfully explains the fundamental historical importance of this understudied industry H-Net Reviews This is a magisterial study of a relatively poorly understood world. To tell it well, Boyd takes seriously the many historiographical layers of the story, using business, technological, labor, legal, and environmental history approaches. The synthesis of these overlapping tales is a huge achievement and his beautiful writing make the book a powerful read. It could well stand as a model for future industrial-environmental historians. Journal of Southern History Overall, Boyd illustrates the double-edged sword that is economic development; its jobs and prosperity often inflict a devastating impact on the non-human and human environments. Boyd makes plain that "the smell of prosperity" is an odor whose costs should be weighed more carefully than Governor Wallace's glib analysis suggests. Environmental History

      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      1. Industrializing the Southern Forest
      2. Logging the Mills
      3. Making Paper
      4. Appropriating the Environment
      5. New South, New Nature
      Notes
      Essay on Sources
      Index

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