Tell your friends about this item:
Urban Green: Nature, Recreation, and the Working Class in Industrial Chicago
Colin Fisher
Urban Green: Nature, Recreation, and the Working Class in Industrial Chicago
Colin Fisher
In early twentieth-century America, affluent city-dwellers made a habit of venturing out of doors and vacationing in resorts and national parks. Yet the rich and the privileged were not the only ones who sought respite in nature. In this groundbreaking book, historian Colin Fisher demonstrates that working-class white immigrants and African Americans in rapidly industrializing Chicago also fled the urban environment during their scarce leisure time.
Commendation Quotes: Colin Fisher's smart, ambitious history shows how Chicago's underclasses--immigrants, African Americans, and laborers--understood and appreciated nature through leisure. Bringing together carefully considered empirical evidence with an absorbing analysis of working-class Chicagoans and their affinities for nature in the city, Fisher vividly reimagines Chicago's past. Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Publisher Marketing: In early twentieth-century America, affluent city-dwellers made a habit of venturing out of doors and vacationing in resorts and national parks. Yet the rich and the privileged were not the only ones who sought respite in nature. In this pathbreaking book, historian Colin Fisher demonstrates that working-class white immigrants and African Americans in rapidly industrializing Chicago also fled the urban environment during their scarce leisure time. If they had the means, they traveled to wilderness parks just past the city limits as well as to rural resorts in Wisconsin and Michigan. But lacking time and money, they most often sought out nature within the city itself--at urban parks and commercial groves, along the Lake Michigan shore, even in vacant lots. Chicagoans enjoyed a variety of outdoor recreational activities in these green spaces, and they used them to forge ethnic and working-class community. While narrating a crucial era in the history of Chicago's urban development, Fisher makes important interventions in debates about working-class leisure, the history of urban parks, environmental justice, the African American experience, immigration history, and the cultural history of nature.
Contributor Bio: Fisher, Colin Colin Fisher is an associate professor of history at the University of San Diego. He teaches classes in U. S. environmental history, environmental visual culture, and history of food. His research centers on landscape and minority cultures of nature.
Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
Released | May 30, 2015 |
ISBN13 | 9781469619958 |
Publishers | The University of North Carolina Press |
Genre | Demographic Orientation > Urban |
Pages | 240 |
Dimensions | 156 × 237 × 19 mm · 374 g |
More by Colin Fisher
See all of Colin Fisher ( e.g. Paperback Book , LP and Hardcover Book )