Proving Up: Domesticating Land in U.S. History
On July 9, 1920, William Krall, a coal miner in Wyoming, was shot by his neighbor in a dispute over water as he attempted to "prove up" and gain title to his homestead. Attempting to understand her grandfather's passion and determination for making his own 160 acres of land in dry, sagebrush country led Professor Lisi Krall on a unique journey through the interconnections of economy, culture, and land in the history of the United States. She tells the story of the domestication of land in the United States, a story that hinges on the market economy and the agrarian and wilderness ethos as foundational land institutions. Drawing on institutional or evolutionary economics, Proving Up explores in detail the rich and ever-changing intermingling of culture, economic, and material conditions through American history. Untangling the complicated history of Americans' experiences with nature, Krall provides a critical focus and a timely contribution to the current debate surrounding our relationship to land and nature.
1019431676
Proving Up: Domesticating Land in U.S. History
On July 9, 1920, William Krall, a coal miner in Wyoming, was shot by his neighbor in a dispute over water as he attempted to "prove up" and gain title to his homestead. Attempting to understand her grandfather's passion and determination for making his own 160 acres of land in dry, sagebrush country led Professor Lisi Krall on a unique journey through the interconnections of economy, culture, and land in the history of the United States. She tells the story of the domestication of land in the United States, a story that hinges on the market economy and the agrarian and wilderness ethos as foundational land institutions. Drawing on institutional or evolutionary economics, Proving Up explores in detail the rich and ever-changing intermingling of culture, economic, and material conditions through American history. Untangling the complicated history of Americans' experiences with nature, Krall provides a critical focus and a timely contribution to the current debate surrounding our relationship to land and nature.
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Proving Up: Domesticating Land in U.S. History

Proving Up: Domesticating Land in U.S. History

by Lisi Krall
Proving Up: Domesticating Land in U.S. History

Proving Up: Domesticating Land in U.S. History

by Lisi Krall

eBook

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Overview

On July 9, 1920, William Krall, a coal miner in Wyoming, was shot by his neighbor in a dispute over water as he attempted to "prove up" and gain title to his homestead. Attempting to understand her grandfather's passion and determination for making his own 160 acres of land in dry, sagebrush country led Professor Lisi Krall on a unique journey through the interconnections of economy, culture, and land in the history of the United States. She tells the story of the domestication of land in the United States, a story that hinges on the market economy and the agrarian and wilderness ethos as foundational land institutions. Drawing on institutional or evolutionary economics, Proving Up explores in detail the rich and ever-changing intermingling of culture, economic, and material conditions through American history. Untangling the complicated history of Americans' experiences with nature, Krall provides a critical focus and a timely contribution to the current debate surrounding our relationship to land and nature.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438430805
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 03/24/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 152
File size: 711 KB

About the Author

Lisi Krall is Professor of Economics at the State University of New York at Cortland.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Thomas Jefferson's Agrarian Vision and the Changing Nature of Property

2. The Dialectics of Government Land Policies (1785–1862)

3. The Dialectics of Government Land Policies on Arid Land

4. Multidimensional Land

5. Wilderness

Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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