The Ecological Edges of Belligerency - Toward a Global Environmental History of the First World War

T. Keller
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This article represents an initial foray into the global environmental history of the First World War and suggests new approaches that can change our understanding of the conflict. With ravaged farmlands, charred trees, and muddy quagmires as iconic images of the First World War, scholars have generally tended to overlook the place and the role of nature. Yet only by taking the environment into account can we fully understand the trauma of war and how this conflict in particular shaped the most basic levels of human existence for years to come. Armies in the First World War were both social and biological entities, which depended on a “military ecology” of energy extraction, production, and supply. To keep soldiers and machines in action, belligerent states commandeered food and fuel throughout the biosphere, extending the war's environmental reach far beyond the western front. Examining a number of the ways that war shaped the periphery—evolving disease ecologies in colonial Africa, tin extraction in Southeast Asia, and food production in Latin America—will show that the boundaries of belligerency were vast. These three regions also illustrate the different ways in which the preparation and pursuit of war transformed societies and the natural world. Seeing what George Kennan called the twentieth century's “seminal catastrophe” from an environmental perspective illuminates the global dimensions of the First World War. The conflict accelerated environmental change that had begun in the previous century and established the patterns of military-industrial production, human victimization, and environmental exploitation that defined the twentieth century.
交战的生态边缘——走向第一次世界大战的全球环境史
这篇文章代表了对第一次世界大战全球环境史的初步探索,并提出了可以改变我们对冲突理解的新方法。被蹂躏的农田、烧焦的树木和泥泞的泥潭是第一次世界大战的标志性形象,学者们通常倾向于忽视自然的位置和作用。然而,只有把环境考虑在内,我们才能充分理解战争的创伤,以及这场冲突是如何在今后几年影响人类生存的最基本层面的。第一次世界大战中的军队既是社会实体,也是生物实体,它依赖于能源开采、生产和供应的“军事生态”。为了保持士兵和机器的运转,交战国家征用了整个生物圈的食物和燃料,使战争的环境影响范围远远超出了西线。考察战争对周边地区的影响——非洲殖民地的疾病生态进化、东南亚的锡开采和拉丁美洲的粮食生产——将表明,战争的边界是广阔的。这三个地区也说明了战争的准备和追求改变社会和自然世界的不同方式。从环境的角度来看乔治·凯南所说的20世纪的“重大灾难”,说明了第一次世界大战的全球性。这场冲突加速了上个世纪开始的环境变化,并确立了军事工业生产、人类受害和环境剥削的模式,这些模式是二十世纪的特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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